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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 



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EGYPT 



THE 



CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY 

BY / 

NORMAN FREDERICK de ClIFFORD 



COMPRISING A HISTORY OF EGYPT, WITH A COMPREHENSIVE AND AUTHENTIC ACCOUNT OF 



^be HntiQuit^ of ^asont^ 



RESULTING FROM MANY YEARS OF PERSONAL INVESTIGATION AND EXHAUSTIVE RESEARCH IN 



INDIA, PERSIA, SYRIA AND THE VALLEY OF THE NILE 



ILLUSTRATED. 



PHILADELPHIA 

THE LINCOLN PUBLISHING COMPANY 
1902 



THE LIBRARY OF 
CONGRESS, 

T*vo Copies Received 

MAY. St 1902 

COPVRtQHT ENTflY 

CLASS '^''yxa No, 
COPY B. 



Vurri 



ENTERED ACCORDING TO ACT OF CONGRESS IN THE YEAR I902 

BY NORMAN FREDERICK de CLIFFORD, 

IN THE OFFICE OF THE LIBRARIAN OF CONGRESS AT WASHINGTON. 



All Rights Reserved. 



GA^^ 



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LfiC 



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TO A TRINITY 
OF 

Hotae, Hcspcrt anti Htimiration. 



..., .LOVE 

:;.'■" : :. TO atY WIFE 
"WHO SO ABLY HELPED ME IN THIS 
MY life's work, 
EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

RESPECT 

FOR THE SUPREME COUNCILS 

OF BOTH THE SOUTHERN AND NORTHERN JURISDICTIONS 

AND TO THE 

SOVEREIGN GRAND INSPECTORS-GENERAL, 33° 

OF THE 

ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED SCOTTISH RITE WHERESOEVER DISPERSED. 

ADMIRATION 

FOR THE MEMORY OF OUR 

REVERED BROTHER ALBERT PIKE 

WHO MADE SCOTTISH RITE MASONRY WHAT IT IS TO-DAY 

THIS BOOK IS MOST RESPECTFULLY 

©cDicatcO 

BY THE AUTHOR. 



PREFACE. 



lEfRE: 



REEMASONRY and Brotherhood are terms recognized at once as 
-^ synonomous throughout the universe ; conveying the very essence 
of Love, Goodwill and Unselfishness, and when practically applied in the 
various walks of life resiilt in the greatest good to the greatest number. 

Such was the thought that prompted the author to undertake the 
preparation of Egypt ^ the Cradle of Aticicjit Masonry^ after first receiving 
the Light in India, and being brought face to face, in the Eastern coun- 
tries, with convincing evidences of the wonderful knowledge acquired by 
the ancient people. 

This knowledge, even from its first and superficial manifestation, 
commanded both intense surprise and admiration. It led to a determina- 
tion to investigate, to the fullest extent, the meaning and purport of the 
numerous hieroglyphic inscriptions, symbols and characters found upon 
the ancient tombs and temples, so that the Masonic Fraternity might 
understand, appreciate and apply the teachings of the hierophants and 
sages of bygone days. 

In writing this work it was deemed expedient to refer to numerous 
Masonic authorities, due acknowledgment and credit being given to each ; 
if, however, such has been omitted, it has been purely an oversight. 

That greater knowledge and more earnest devotion to Masonry ; that 
higher and nobler manhood and purer thought and life, may follow a 
careful perusal of these pages is the sincere desire of 

The Author. 



CONTENTS. 



PAGE 

CHAPTER 1. 
ALEXANDRIA— THE ANTIQUITY OF MASONRY 1 



CHAPTER II. 
RUINED TEMPLES— MASONRY AND MASONIC SYMBOLS 26 

CHAPTER ill. 
ANCIENT CITIES— OSIRIAN MYTH— KARMA 47 

CHAPTER IV. 
THE NILE— ORIGIN OF THE NAME FREE MASON— SCOTTISH RITE PHILOSOPHY . 71 

CHAPTER V. 
ANCIENT MYSTERIES-SCOTTISH RITE PHILOSOPHY 95 

CHAPTER VI. 
SUEZ CANAL— THE DRUSES, THEIR MANNERS AND CUSTOMS 121 

CHAPTER VII. 
AGRICULTURE-IRRIGATION-LOTUS-PAPYRUS 147 

CHAPTER VIII. 
THE SUPREME ARCHITECT OF THE UNIVERSE 171 

CHAPTER IX. 
MOSQUES— TOMBS— MASSACRE OF MAMELUKES— HELIOPOLIS 199 

CHAPTER X. 
ESOTERIC TEACHING OF THE SCOTTISH RITE-BRAIN AND THOUGHT .... 221 



CONTENTS, 

PAGE 

CHAPTER XL 
PYRAMIDS-SPHINX— TOMBS 245 

CHAPTER XII. 
SOLOMON-DEATH OF HIRAM-GROSS- SWASTICA 267 

CHAPTER XIII. 
MUMMIFICATION— TRANSMIGRATION— RE-INCARNATION 291 

CHAPTER XIV. 
SIXTEEN SAVIOURS— LOST KNOWLEDGE 31.5 

CHAPTER XV. 
THE GOLDEN FLEECE-ROMAN EAGLE— MASONIC APRON— WHAT IT TEACHES. 3^9 

CHAPTER XVI. 
PYRAMIDS OF SAKKARAH-LISHT-MEDUM-THE FAYUM-LABYRINTH 363 

CHAPTER XVII. 
SUN WORSHIP— ZODIAC— MASONIC ALLEGORIES 387 

CHAPTER XVIIl. 

A VOYAGE UP THE NILE-DESCRIPTION OF TOMBS AND TEMPLES— PRO DORIC 

COLUMNS , 411 

CHAPTER XIX. 
INEFFABLE DEGREES— THOUGHTS ON ECCLESIASTES— I. N. R. 1 43.5 

CHAPTER XX. 

VOYAGING UP THE NILE— EXAMINING TOMBS AND TEMPLES— PAINTINGS- 
SCULPTURES 461 

CHAPTER XXI. 
MASONIC TEACHINGS— HINDU BEGGAR— ROMAN CATHOLICISM 485 



CONTENTS. 



CHAPTER XXII. 
THEBES— COLOSSl-DER-EL-BAHARl-LUXOR-KARNAK 509 



CHAPTER XXIII. 

CEREMONIES— INITIATION — BLUE LODGE-TRANSMIGRATION — MYSTERY LAN- 
GUAGE ,533 

CHAPTER XXIV. 

THE GAWAZEE— EXPLORING TEMPLES AND TOMBS— PHIL/E AND ITS RUINS 

—NUBIA 557 

CHAPTER XXV. 

JEWISH TRADITIONS AND CUSTOMS— CABLE TOW— CEREMONIES OF ANCIENT 

INITIATION— BOOK OF THE LAW 581 

CHAPTER XXVI. 

CIRCUMCISION— UPON WHAT THE ANCIENT CRAFTSMEN WERE OBLIGATED- 

THE LOST WORD 605 



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. 



FACING 
PAGK 

POMPEY'S PILLAR FROM THE CEMETERY 4 '^ 

HARBOR OF ALEXANDRIA 10 ' 

CLEOPATRA'S NEEDLE, ALEXANDRIA (Now Standing in New York City) 16- 

THE GRAND SQUARE (Alexandria) 20 

EXTERIOR WALL OF THE TEMPLE OF DENDERAH 34 

FIRST CATARACT OF THE NILE 76 

VIEW OF ASWAN OR SYENE 82 

THE RUINED TEMPLE OF RAMESES (Karnak) 100 ' 

ENTRANCE TO THE CAVE TEMPLE OF ELEPHANTA (Bombay, India) 112 : 

SHIPS PASSING THROUGH THE SUEZ CANAL 128 

MAHAMUDIYEH CANAL (Alexandria) 154^ 

PROPYLON OF THE TEMPLE OF RAMESES 111 (Karnak) . 16a • 

A MINARET 182 

MOSQUE OF AKBAR (Cairo) 202 "^ 

FELLAHEEN PLOWING WITH CAMELS 208 ' 

MOSQUE OF SULTAN HASSAN (Cairo) 214 

THE PERISTYLE (Phllae) 228 

THE OSIRIDE COLUMNS— TEMPLE OF THE MYSTERIES 232 ' 

THE KASR-EL-NIL BRIDGE (Cairo) 248 ' 

OFFICERS AND GRAND OFFICERS OF THE SOUTHERN JURISDICTION 266 

TEMPLE OF HATHOR (Denderah) 282 

TOMBS OF THE CALIPHS (Cairo) 294 

TOMBS OF THE MAMELUKES (Cairo) 300 • 

TOMB AND MOSQUE OF KAIT BEY (Cairo) 306 ' 

ISLAND OF PHIL/E FROM THE ROCKS OF THE CATARACT 828 ' 

SACRED LAKE OF THE MYSTERIES (Karnak) 334,,,- 



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. 

PACING 
PAGE 

THE LITTLE TEMPLE OF MEDINET HABU-JACHIN AND BOAZ 348'" 

DISTANT VIEW OF THE PYRAMIDS OF GIZEH 366' 

CORNER OF THE GREAT PYRAMID (Making the Ascent) 372- 

OUR FLOATING HOME-THE DAHABIYEH 414"' 

ROCK TOMBS OF BENI HASSAN 432"' 

TEMPLE OF RAMESES IV (Karnak) 446 k ' 

GRAND OFFICERS OF NORTHERN JURISDICTION 460 

VIEW OF THE CITY OF ASYUr 470 ■ 

HALL OF COLUMNS, TEMPLE OF DENDERAH _ 476 

ENTRANCE TO TEMPLE OF MEDINET HABU 482 

THE ARTIST'S CHOICE (Philae) 490 

THE COLOSSI (Thebes) • 512^' 

THE RAMESSEUM OR MEMNONIUM (Thebes) 526 ''^ 

HYPOSTYLE HALL OF THE GREAT TEMPLE OF KARNAK 530 

THE GREAT SPHINX 536 

TEMPLE OF THE MYSTERIES (Thebes) 550 ' 

THE GAWAZEE, OR DANCING GIRLS 560 

COLUMNS IN THE COURT OF THE TEMPLE OF EDFU 564 ■ 

ROCK TOMBS AT GEBEL, OR HAGAR SILSILIS 568 ' 

KiOSQUE, OR PHARAOH'S BED 574 ' 

KOM-OMBUS— TEMPLE OF THE MYSTERIES -. 592 ■ 

INTERIOR VIEW OF THE CAVE TEMPLE OF ELEPHANTA (Bombay, India) 610 ' 

PYLON OF TEMPLE (Karnak) ' 614 " 



INTRODUCTION 



S'T'N this age of countless books and wide-spread literature there is still 
I remaining a vast field, both for the attainment of knowledge and 
its dissemination, by means of that ever useful, instructive and enter- 
taining type of literature, — the historical narrative. 

In this connection Egypt^ the Cradle of Ancient Masonry is entitled 
to more than passing notice, not oxAy from the general reader, but more 
particularly from the Masonic Fraternity, for whose peculiar and especial 
benefit this work was conceived, undertaken and completed. 

In all the ages which have elapsed since the mighty Pharaohs 
swayed the destinies of the surging masses, composing the ancient 
empires, whose silent and impressive memorials stand as mute witnesses 
to the exceeding grandeur and glory of Egyptian civilizations, the savant 
and the scholar have been delving and exploring for the secrets which 
have been hidden within the concealed recesses of her tombs and temples. 

Years of untiring energy and zeal have been devoted by the author, 
Bro. N. F. de Clifford, to the accumulation of data, the very best part of 
whose life has been spent in personal investigation and actual research 
among the archives of India, Persia, Syria and the Valle}' of the Nile. 

The work treats, primarily, as the title implies, of the infancy of 
Freemasonry, not only proving by natural deductions, and positive evi- 
dence its antiquity, but tracing its rise and progress, and the glorious 
fruition to which it has attained at the present day. 



INTRODUCTION. 

Beginning, in the opening Chapter, with the founding of the City of 
Alexandria b. c. 332, a vast store house of knowledge, beneficial instruc- 
tion and pleasurable entertainment is unfolded in charming sequence, 
until the Lost Word is finally reached in the closing Chapter and the 
narrative ends. 

To every Masonic student, in fact to every IMason, knowledge is an 
absolute essential in the attainment of that perfection on which depend 
the Higher Degrees, and toward which we should ever strive with unceas- 
ing effort. 

An actual personal examination of the evidences inscribed upon the 
tombs, temples and monuments in the Valley of the Nile, in India, 
Persia and Sj^ria would doubtless be of intense interest to every sincere 
and earnest Mason, but should environment prevent, the graphic descrip- 
tion herein contained will constitute a most acceptable and authentic 
substitute. 

With sincere gratification upon the completion of this valuable 
addition to Masonic literature ; with due appreciation of the unselfish 
labor of love bestowed by the author for the advancement of Masonic 
knowledge ; and with the earnest hope that " More Light " may result 
to every inquiring Mason, from the stud}' and perusal of these pages, I 
have the honor to present Egypi^ llic Cradle of Aiiciciii Masonry. 

John Arthur, 

Past Master St. John's Lodge No. 9, F. & A. M., 
Deputy Grand Master of Grand Lodge of Washington, 
Past Potentate Afifi Temple, A. A. O. N. M. S., 
And Member of all other M.\sonic Bodies. 

Seattle, Wash., May, 1902. 



^kxantrria— ^ntiqultg oi JJlasoitrg, 



"Cbc Nile! the Nile! I bear its gathering roar, 
No vision now, no dream of ancient years - 
"Cbroned on the rocks, amid tbe watery war, 
Cbc King of floods, old Bomer's Nile, appears 
Qlitb gentle smile, majestically sweet. 
Curling tbe billowy steeds tbat vex them at bis feet, 

— Lord Lindsay, 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 



CHAPTER I. 

ALEXANDRIA— THE ANTIQUITY OF MASONRY. 

(5 I HK city of Alexandria was founded by Alexander tlie Great, B. c. 
e j| 332, and here at the age of thirty-two, in the thirteenth year of his 
reign, he was buried with all the pomp and splendor of that age, and 
to-day there is not a single stone to mark the spot where this great 
warrior was laid to rest. This city was bequeathed to the Roman 
Empire by Ptolemy Alexander, B. c. 80, but it was not until fifty years 
later that it became an Imperial city, with a Roman Governor who was 
appointed by the Emperor Augustus. 

In A. D. 640 Alexandria was captured by the Arab Caliph under 
Amru, a Saracen, who wrote to his master the Caliph Omar " that he 
had taken a city containing four thousand palaces, four thousand 
baths, twelve thousand dealers in fresh oil, twelve thousand gardeners, 
forty thousand Jews who pay tribute, and four hundred theatres or places 
of amusement." From this account of Amru we are enabled to form 
some idea of what a magnificent city it must have been. 

History informs us that this city was second only to Rome, with an 
immense population, very highly civilized, and possessed of a most 
wonderful knowledge in mechanical arts and sciences,, greatl}^ bej^ond 
the comprehension of our architects and men of letters. This city had 
two libraries, the Soter and the Serapeum, and it was in this celebrated 
city that Mark suffered martyrdom and Peter preached Christianity. 
The modern city stands partly on what in ancient days was known as 
the Island of Pharos, but which is now a peninsula. The old city was 
built on the main land close to and nearly adjoining the modern town. 
The ruined walls of this ancient city are to be plainly traced, and the 

3 



4 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

old reservoirs which were constructed over two thousand years ago are 
still in a good state of preservation. Few remains of the ancient city 
are to be found at the present time, and it is only when workmen make 
excavations that fragments of pilasters, statues, etc., may be seen, which 
belonged to the Alexandrian and Ptolemaic age. 

How well I remember m}- first visit to Alexandria as we came 
steaming along up to the harbor of this remarkable city, on board 
the Peninsular & Oriental Company's side-wheel steamer Ripon from 
the Island of Malta, one never to be forgotten, lovely Sabbath morning. 
Shortly after sunrise we saw the sandy shores of this most wonderful 
countr}^ and rising up into the clear azure sky, seemingly, from out the 
very ocean itself, was that far famed and justly celebrated column known 
as Pompey's Pillar. Next to view came the light house, and the boats 
with their lateen sails ; the harbor and the shipping, from whose masts 
float the flags of many nations, then the ver}^ unpretentious looking 
palace of the Khedive with its whitewashed walls on the Ras-et-tyn, and 
last, but not least, the numberless wind-mills. All these various things 
seemed to impress themselves upon my brain, and these scenes remain 
with me and come back at memory's call whenever the name Bgypt or 
Alexandria is mentioned. 

I was quite a boy when first I saw that celebrated city and visited it 
with my father during a vacation from school, and since then I have 
travelled through nearly every countr}^ upon the face of the earth and 
sailed on every sea and ocean. I have visited Alexandria many times 
in later years, but the memories of my first visit seem to recall the 
scenes and incidents which charmed and fascinated me in my boyhood's 
happy days in the long ago. 

The " donkey boys " of Alexandria are a feature in themselves, the 
hackmen of our own country, in their most palmy days, could not begin 
to compare with the cool, rascally impudence of these celebrated " boys." 
Just as soon as you land from your boat they will crowd arpund you, 
and Nolens Volens forcibly drag you along, actually lifting you into the 
saddle aud compelling you to ride their patient, enduring little animals. 
These, boys prevent their donkeys from running away, when not working, 
by simply tying up one of the forelegs, instead of hitching them as we do 
our animals to a post or fence. They give their donkeys very peculiar 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 5 

names, such as : Napoleon, John Bull, Yankee Doodle, Mark Twain,, 
Moses, Jesus Christ, etc. 

The Graud Square or Place Mohammed Ali^ formerl}' called the 
Place dcs Consuls, is the most noticeable place in Alexandria to-day, and 
reminds one of a Kuropean cit}'. It is embellished with beautiful trees 
and fountains, with a very fine equestrian statue of ]Mohammed AH 
erected in the centre. The statue is sixteen feet high and stands upon 
a pedestal of Tuscan marble, twenty feet in height, making the monu- 
ment in all thirty-six feet. The whole square is surrounded with 
magnificent edifices, and among them are some very fine hotels with all 
our modern improvements. They have some very fine stores here that 
will compare favorably with any of those in our own cities. In this 
square are located some of the prominent public buildings, and it is the 
regular promenade for the Europeans and Americans who live there. 
In fact, all classes of people go there to enjoy themselves after the busi- 
ness hours of the day. 

We visited Pompey's Pillar, located a short distance from the 
city, which stands upon a mound forty feet high, as near as I can 
remember. According to some historians, this w^as the site of the 
Serapeum, situated in the Egyptian quarter of Rhacotis near the 
catacombs. This celebrated pillar is constructed of red granite, no 
doubt brought from the quarries of Syene, near the first cataract of the 
Nile, on the borders of Nubia, to which we shall refer later on. 

Pompey's Pillar stands upon a square base or plinth, and bears a 
Greek inscription which most certainly proves that it was erected to honor 
the Emperor Diocletian. The shaft is composed of a single piece of 
granite, sevent3^-three feet long and twenty-nine feet eight inches in 
circumference, crowned with a Corinthian capital nine feet high. 
The base is about fifteen feet square, making the column nearly one 
hundred feet in height. It is one of the first objects to be seen on 
approaching the harbor of Alexandria and it is well worth a visit. 

A party of English sailors, while ashore on liberty one day, flew a 
kite over this monument, and in this way they placed a string over it, 
then they drew over a stouter and stronger one, until, eventually they 
succeeded in drawing up a rope ladder, by the means of which they 
ascended to the top and displa3^ed the British flag upon its summit. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

They discovered a cavity on the top, in the capital, showing that at some 
time or other something" must have occupied the hollow, and it has 
been claimed by some writers that a statue once stood there. This 
pillar does not in any way owe its name to the great Pompey, who 
was murdered off the Egyptian coast by his ward Ptolemy, but to a 
Roman Prefect of the same name, who, as is proven by the inscription 
it bears, erected it in honor of the Emperor Diocletian " the guardian 
genius of the city," in return for a gift of grain he had sent to the 
Alexandrians {^during a year of famine^ no doubt). 

The two obelisks that are called Cleopatra's Needles were erected 
at Heliopolis in b. c. 1,500 by Thothmes III, one of the greatest Egypt- 
ian Pharoahs, in order to commemorate victories over his enemies in 
the " Golden Age of Egypt." Thej^ were brought from that great 
City of the Sun for the express purpose of decorating the temple of 
Casser (The Csesereum), in Alexandria, during the reign of Tiberius. 
One of these stiipendous monoliths was given to the English Gov- 
ernment by Mohammed AH, and after considerable delay it was finally 
shipped to England in the year 1877, where it eventually arrived, 
having passed through great danger of loss by shipwreck, and 
stands to-day upon the Thames embankment, a relic of one of Egypt's 
grandest monarchs. The dimensions of this stone are sixty-eight feet 
long and seven feet seven inches across the base. The other one was 
brought to New York, by Commander Goringe, in the year 1S80. This 
obelisk is seventy-one feet long, and seven feet seven inches at the base, 
measured across the face of the stone. I have often sat upon the com- 
panion stone, as it laid lengthwise beside this monolith, deciphering 
the hieroglyphics and pondering upon the glory that belonged to a 
people who built such magnificent monuments to adorn the banks of their 
grand old river Nile. Both of these obelisks were quarried in Syene, 
and are composed of the same kind and quality of granite as that in 
Pompey's Pillar. 

These monoliths were erected to honor one of Egypt's mighty 
warriors nearly thirty-five centuries ago, and yet, now, they are the 
admiration of people not in existence when this great and powerful 
king conquered the Maharania of Mesopotamia, and blazoned upon 
their stony sides the deeds that he had done to thoroughly estab- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 7 

lish his kingdom, upon the banks of the river Nile, in the hoary civ- 
ilization of a far away past. When Commander Goringe lowered this 
magnificent monolith from its pedestal in Alexandiia, in order to ship it 
to America, they found beneath the stoue a number of Masonic emblems 
as,^an apron, a trowel, a trestle board, the two ashlars, etc. The 
discovery of these emblems, placed beneath this mighty monolith 
by our ancient Brethren, must most assuredly demonstrate to the present 
generation that the peculiar rites and ceremonies practiced by the 
speculative (?) masons of the twentieth century, in erecting and 
dedicating their monuments and temples, were not only performed 
by the practical, operative masons at the beginning of our present 
era, but in every epoch of the world's history. This proves the verity of 
our rituals, in the statement that Masonry has existed from time imme- 
morial, and that the most intelligent men in every age have been 
members of our most Illustrious Fraternity. 

There were two Libraries in Alexandria during the reign of the 
Ptolemies that were the envy and admiration of the nations of antiquity. 
Ptolemy Soter was the founder of the one that bore his name, and he 
collected a very large number of books for the especial purpose of 
drawing together the most eminent scholars and learned men of 
the world for the improvement of the Sciences, Arts, Philosophies, 
etc., and founding in Alexandria a Museum or College like that of the 
Royal Society of London, England, or the Royal Academy of Paris, 
France. There is no dovibt but Ptolemy Soter communicated his 
love of learning, the development of the intellectual qualifications, as 
well as the collecting of valuable books, to his son Ptoleni}^ Philadelphus, 
for we positively know, from the historical records of that age, that this 
young king, previous to his father's death, sent learned men to all 
parts of Greece and Asia, to collect the most valuable books to be 
found in those countries, and bring them to Egypt, in order to grace and 
adorn the shelves of the Library in Alexandria, and to enrich the 
collection that had already been made b}' his father. Ptolemy Philadel- 
phus followed up the work, so ably begun by his predecessor, in 
enlarging the Soter Library, already established in the Rcgio Bruchaim^ 
then the most magnificent quarter of the city, the abode of royalty, 
and the location of the splendid palaces of the Ptolemies. He also 



8 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

organized and established a Library in the Serapeum, the celebrated 
temple of Serapis, the principal building of the Rcgio Rhacotis, or regular 
Egyptian quarter of the city. This celebrated building was of such 
remarkable magnificence and beauty that it rivalled those glorious 
buildings of the Roman Capitol. 

According to the best authorities the Serapeum occupied the site of 
the mound whereon stands Pompey's Pillar, and that column is said, by 
some writers, to have formed a part of this remarkable edifice. The 
structure was supported by firmly built arches, distributed through 
various subterranean passages. The building itself was surrounded 
by a quadrangular portico, leading from which were most magnificent 
halls and corridors, wherein was placed exquisite statuary that 
demonstrated their knowledge in the arts, while the books upon the 
shelves showed the source from whence they derived their wondrous 
knowledge of science and philosophy ; but the triumph of the Soter and 
Serapeum Libraries was in the presence of the most learned men and 
scholars, who came from all quarters of the earth, men who had passed 
through the various stages of culture and refinement, in their own coun- 
tries, and had been attracted to this wondrous city of Alexandria by the 
stupendous development belonging to the Egyptian civilization during 
the dynasty of the Ptolemies. 

Ptolemy Euergetus appropriated all the books that were brought into 
Egypt by foreigners, no matter from whence they came, or who they 
were. He placed them in the Libraries, and when the owners made com- 
plaint about the seizure of their books, they were given a copy, but 
the original would remain in the Library, and in this manner he was ena- 
bled to gather an enormous number of the most valuable works, all of 
which were added to either the Soter or Serapeum Libraries, until accord- 
ing to Calimachus, who was the librarian under Ptolemy Euergetus, 
a catalogue of the books was formed and the two Libraries classified. 
By arranging them into one hundred and twenty classes, he found that 
there were seven hundred thousand in the Soter and four hundred thou- 
sand in the Serapeum. 

I do not wish to enter into a description of the Alexandrian School of 
Literature and Philosophy, but simply to state that all peoples were bene- 
fited by Egyptian civilization and her marvellous intellectual advance- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 9 

ment. It is a well known fact that the Alexandrian philosophers and 
scholars devoted a vast amount of their time and attention to the transla- 
tion, into Greek and other languages, of the priceless treasures that 
had been placed upon the shelves of these most magnificent Libraries. 
In disseminating their knowledge throughout the world, b}' transla- 
tions into a language common among the learned men of that age, they 
benefited all mankind, some of whom made antiquit}' illustrious with the 
knowledge gained through drinking from this most glorious fount of 
ancient Bgyptian wisdom. There are various conflicting accounts of the 
destruction of the magnificent Soter Librar}-, and it has been very difiicult 
for me to decide as to which is the true or the false, because there has 
been a vast amount of evidence brought forward by various writers, for 
and against, which, as I say, makes it difficult to arrive at a decision; but 
after careful investigation I have come to the conclusion that all the 
priceless volumes upon the shelves of this stupendous libiary were 
destroyed by the order of the Caliph Omar, in A.D. 641, after Amru 
took possession of Alexandria and its libraries. 

History informs us that a celebrated peripatetic philosopher and 
a friend of Amru, called John the Grammarian lived in Alexandria 
at the time it was forcibly wrested from the Persians by the Arabian 
General Amru, B.C. 640. John went to him immediately and requested 
that he give him the books contained in the Soter Library. Amru told 
him it would be impossible to grant such a request himself, but that 
he would write to the Caliph Omar for his consent. The Caliph on 
receiving the request from Amru made answer thereto that " If those 
books contain the same doctrine with the Koran, they could be of no use, 
since the Koran contained all necessary truths ; but if they contained any 
thing contrary to that book, they ought to be destroyed ; and therefore, 
whatever their contents, he ordered them to be burned," in consequence 
of which they were given to the public baths of the cit}^ to be used 
as fuel, and we are informed, by the best authorities, that these priceless 
treasures of knowledge and information supplied those furnaces with fire 
for a period of six months. 

It is also positively asserted, b}' some historians, that by an order 
of the Christian, Theodosius, the Serapeum was sacked, the books 
destroyed, the magnificent building pillaged, and the exquisite statuary 



10 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

broken. What had been the admiration of the civilized world, the very- 
centre and source of intellectual development, was completely destroyed 
by fanatical and bigoted Christians. There are many other accounts 
of the destruction of these libraries and their contents. One relates 
that a fire destroyed the valuable treasures, both books and building. 
Some writers give one account and some another ; but one thing is 
certain, and that is they were destroyed. By whom, when, or how, it is 
difficult to decide, but we are positively certain that the destruction 
of these libraries was assuredly one of the most barbarous and unpar- 
donable acts ever committed by the hand of man. This vandalism 
resulted in the suppression of the Greek School of Philosophy, and 
turned the European world into the dark night of Christian barbarism 
that hung over the people like a deadly nightmare for twelve hundred 
years. The Christians have branded this era of Christian domination 
"The Dark Ages." 

Alexandria has two harbors, the Old or Western, and the New or 
Eastern. The former is most decidedly the better of the two. It has a 
good anchorage close to the town, with from twenty to forty feet of water. 
A very fine breakw^ater protects the Old harbor, allowing shipping to lie 
safely at anchor at all times of the year without fear of wind or storm. 
There are three entrances leading into this celebrated harbor, but the 
middle is the principal one, considered to be the best, and the one most 
generally used ; it is fully a quarter of a mile wide, is well marked 
and buoyed, so that pilots have no difiiculty in taking vessels through 
this channel into the deep water of the harbor and pointing out the 
anchorage. 

The Eastern or New harbor is very seldom used on account of its 
exposure to the heav}^ winds from the North. At one time this harbor 
was the only place in which " Christian " vessels were allowed to anchor. 
It was never considered safe, in fact it was more like an open roadstead ; 
but now we ver}^ seldom find vessels in the New harbor, because 
the Old harbor is now in common use. Shipping from all parts of the 
world may be seen lying safely at anchor, side by side, in one of the 
best ports in the Mediterranean Sea — the Old harbor of Alexandria. 

Ah ! what glorious days I have spent in sailing from one harbor to 
another, examining the various points of interest and listening to the 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. H 

legends and stories told by my friend and companion, Abd-el-Belek. 
I have much enjoyed a visit to the breakwater, to the queer Turkish fleet 
of old-fashioned men of war, with their three and four tiers of guns, 
the palace on the Ras-et-tj'n, and the ancient site of "Pharos," the cele- 
brated lighthouse, as well as sailing around " pirates' bay," the strong- 
hold of the ancient Greek and Phoenician sea rovers, who made this bay 
their headquarters long centuries before the great Alexander was born. 
I have often sat upon the thwart of our boat, when becalmed of a lovely 
moonlight night, and watched the twinkling lights of the shipping in the 
distance, and the swarth}' faces of our boatmen, pondering upon the glory 
of ancient Egypt and the hoary civilization on the banks of the Nile, 
when our great ancestors were digging clams with stone hatchets in the 
lagoons of Europe, and the altars of the Druids ran red with the blood of 
human sacrifice. 

The catacombs of Alexandria are not very extensive, and are of 
Egypto-Greek origin. Strabo states in book 17, page 795, that "the 
quarter where it is placed had the name of the Necropolis." I did not 
find anything of especial interest in these receptacles of the dead, but I 
simply call the attention of my readers to the place and the fact that they 
can be ver^^ easily found by simph' calling a donkey boy, jumping on to 
his little animal and telling the boy where you want to go. It is not far 
and the trip will only cost you about a quarter of a dollar. It is close to 
Pompey's Pillar and 3^ou can visit both places on the same trip. 

There are quite a number of places one may visit on donke}- back, 
and very enjoyable ones, more especially if you have friends to accom- 
pany you. 

The Pharos, or lighthouse, was situated on the extreme point of the 
Island of Pharos. Its foundation was commenced b}' Ptolemy Soter, but 
was not completed until the reign of his son and successor, Ptolemy 
Philadelphus, about the 3'ear B. c. 2S3, at a cost of eight hundred talents. 
It was constructed of beautiful white marble and built in the shape of a 
tower that was five hundred and fifty-two feet high, on the top of 
which a fire was kept continualh' burning, said to have been dis- 
tinctl}' visible forty-two miles at sea. It was erected for the purpose 
of directing sailors into the baj' and harbor of Alexandria. History 
informs us that the following inscription was carved upon it : " King 



12 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

Ptolemy to the gods, the saviours, for the benefit of sailors," but 
Sostratus, the architect, who was desirous of having the honor of erect- 
ing this magnificent edifice, cut his own name upon the stones of the 
tower and covered it with cement, upon which he lightly chiselled 
this inscription. In the course of time the cement decayed, disappeared 
and dropped from the face of the stone or tower, taking with it the name 
of Ptolemy, and in its place was to be seen: "Sostratus the Cnidian, 
son of Dexphanes, to the gods, the saviours, for the benefit of sailors." 
This justly celebrated lighthouse, or tower, was considered to be one 
of the wonders of the world. 

The population of Alexandria during the reign of the Ptolemies 
was estimated at nearl}' half a million, but it dwindled down to a few 
thousand at the end of the eighteenth century. To-day it has a 
population of two hundred and forty thousand, sixty thousand of whom 
are Europeans, principally Greeks, Italians, French and English. 
According to Josephus i: 31, he estimated the population of this city 
at three hundred thousand, and the whole of Egypt at seven million. 

It was in this cit}^, on the steps of the Csesereum, that Hypatia, 
the maiden philosopher of Greece, was brutally murdered by order of 
Archbishop Cj'ril in the year A. D. 415. She had been lecturing to 
the assembled thousands in the immense auditorium of this magnifi- 
cent structure upon her favorite questions : " Where are we ? What am 
I? What can I know-? and Where am I loved?" By her eloquence 
and the subjects chosen for her lectures she drew immense numbers 
to hear her, at the same time evoked the envy and wrath of the Christ- 
ians, which eventually led to her destruction and the suppression of the 
Greek School of Philosophy, to which I have previously referred. At 
her death, when the glorious Theosophical and Philosophical truths 
were stamped out, it gave great power into the hands of the early 
Church Fathers, revolutionizing the whole world and bringing on the 
" Dark Ages " of Christian barbarism, or the rule of the Catholic 
Church over the people, for long, weary centuries. At this time 
it was considered proper to kill any one, even a bosom friend or 
nearest relative, if they dared to advocate a religion that was inimical 
to the Catholic faith, and we should ever remember that from the fourth 
to the end of the seventeenth century, the Catholic Church dominated 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 13 

the whole of the European nations, their governments, laws, literature, 
religion, sciences, and philosophies. Human rights were unknown, 
while ignorance, outrage, oppression, and injustice ruled supreme. The 
tentacles of the Roman Catholic Octopus enwrapped the most intel- 
ligent men of the age in its deadly fold and drank the life-blood of 
countless thousands. 

All literature not officially sanctioned or approved by the Romish 
Church was proscribed under the penalty of death, and Dr. Draper 
informs us that " men in terror burned their libraries in order to save 
themselves and families from destruction." From the commencement 
of the Christian era until the end of the eighteenth century, the 
Romish Church, in its crnelt}' and bigotry, gave to human rights and 
individual liberty not the shadow of a chance to believe according to 
the dictates of its own conscience, in fact the Romish Church in those 
days was kept busy hunting out, condemning, and burning at the 
stake " witches " and heretics. During this age the j-ack and stake 
were the ^^ viild'''' persuaders to bring both men and women into the 
bosom of " Holy Mother Church." Dr. Dick, an ecclesiastic writer, says 
that one hundred thousand of Germany's most intelligent men and 
women were burned alive at the stake during the fourteenth century 
for the crime of witch-craft alone. 

John Wesley, the celebrated divine, informs us in his sermons 
that the religious contentions and persecutions were so fierce and unspar- 
ing during this age of Christian " Brotherly Love " that forty millions 
were slaughtered within the short space oi forty years. Was ever record 
of death so awful and appalling as this ? But, thank God, we have 
passed beyond the damnable power of this Roman Catholic Octopus. 
They know their hold upon the people is gradually but surely slip- 
ping away, and it is 011I3' a question of time when the Romish Church 
will be, like her most firm adherent and supporter — Spain — a thing of 
the past, for with her downfall on this American continent, the dawn of 
a New Light and a New Era will beam forth. As man stands erect 
within the rays of effulgent glory, with arms outstretched to wel- 
come the coming of this New Light that will give him Free Thought, 
Free Conscience and Free Government, the cross of bondage falls behind 
him into the shadows of the dark past, among the falling ruins of the 



14 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Romish institutions that have in every age been the most bitter and 
relentless foe of education, in free secular schools, because, so long as 
they can keep the world and people in ignorance, just so long will 
they be enabled to rule it with their niunmieries. 

My dear Brothers, let me quote you parts of two speeches that 
were made by two Methodist ministers at the Methodist Convention 
held in St. Paul's Methodist Episcopal Church, New York, Novem- 
ber 19th, 1900. Bishop Goodsell, of Tennessee, while speaking of 
the work that was being done bj^ their Missionaries in Southern 
Europe, said : " There are many who doubt whether we have done 
any work in Italy, the land of superstition and priestcraft; whether 
we could ever hope to accomplish anj^thing there, in the face of the 
tremendous press of adverse thought with which we are confronted. 
The fact is, we sent one of our workers into Itah*. He soon made 
up his mind that in Rome we had to do as do the Romans. He 
began by training the 3'oung, by taking them into oiir schools and 
seminaries. The work is slow, but its value has been recently 
testified to by the pontiff himself, who has honored us by excom- 
municating every one, teachers and pupils alike, connected with our 
institutions of learning. In his effort to preserve for himself the 
triple crown of papacy, he has issued a sweeping interdiction against 
the schools, and every one passing through their gates. This, how- 
ever, has only made us more determined to wipe out a system 
which has created, out of a former man of empire, a cringing beggar 
with a monkey and a grind-organ." 

At the same place and during the same Convention the Rev. Dr. C. 
W. Drees said : " Christendom is divided into two camps, with Protes- 
tantism on one hand and Greek and Roman Catholicism on the other. 
The time is upon us when, anew, the questions which appeared in the 
Protestant reformation will begin to agitate the world, and demand to be 
pushed to their final issue. After slumbering through four centuries, 
these self-same questions were awakened, by the last act of infani}^, of the 
pontiff in declaring himself infallible. Within twent3'-four hours after 
that blasphemous declaration had been written, on the triple crown of 
Rome, the Prussian armies invaded Catholic France. Forty-five days 
later the battle of Sedan was fought, with Protestant Prussia the victor, 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 15 

and twenty days ouly had elapsed when the united armies entered the 
' holy city ' where the pope held sway, bringing with them carloads of 
Bibles. The pope lost his temporal power, and since that day the creed 
has been weakening. 

" The Roman Church at one time held sway everywhere, but now 
both that church and Spanish domination have fallen off their high 
pedestals. When Spain is arraigned the Catholic church should be 
arraigned with that power as co-respondent. Ever since Isabella signed 
away the liberty of Spain to the pope there has been illegitimate alli- 
ance between statecraft and priestcraft against human liberty and human 
progress." 

. The Csesareum was commenced by Cleopatra, but, it was not 
finished until long after her death, then it received the name Cassareum, 
to honor the Emperor Augustus, in whose reign it was finished, and it 
was dedicated to his worship. Philo, of Alexandria, who lived in A. D. 60, 
gives us a description of this magnificent temple, stating that it was 
" facing a secure harbor, filled with votive offerings consisting of pictures 
and statues of gold and silver, and surrounded with a vast enclosure 
containing priestly residences, a library, sacred grove, propylae, and large 
apartments, all open to the air, and all richly ornamented." It became 
a Christian Cathedral during the reign of Constantine. It was burned 
by the soldiers of Constantius, restored in A. d. 365 and completely 
destroyed by the Pagans during the reign of Valentinian and Valens. 
It was then rebuilt once more in the year A. d. 36S by Athanasius and 
remained the Cathedral church of the Patriarch of Alexandria until it 
fell into the hands of the Arabs in the year A. D. 640, when Amru cap- 
tured the city. It once more became a Christian church in the year A. D. 
727, and remained so until it was completely destroyed by fire in the 
year A. D. 912. There are a great many places of interest , in the city 
and immediate vicinity that will well repay one for the time expended in 
visiting them ; for instance : The Mahmudiya Canal, Lake Mareotis, the 
Saltworks, the Palace on the Ras-et-tyn, Ponipej^'s Pillar, Catacombs, etc. 
One of the most delightful trips for me was a visit to the site of 
the celebrated Pharos, whose tower is said to have been destroyed by an 
earthquake in the year A. D. 1203, the ruins of which are still visible 
beneath the waters of the sea on any calm day when the water is smooth 



16 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

and unruffled. One can spend a very pleasant day in visiting the town 
of Ramleh. The botanist will here find a fertile field in which to ramble 
for collections; as here, aroiind Alexandria, he or she will be enabled to 
obtain specimens of over one-half the entire Flora of Egj'pt. The 
flowering season is said to begin about Christmas in the vicinity of Alex- 
andria, after the winter rains are over, but, of course the abundance of 
flowers depend in a great measure upon the Autumn rainfall. If these 
rains start about the latter part of October and continue through 
November, flowers of every variet^^ will be found in plenty in the follow- 
ing season, which is said to begin about the first of January. At this 
time dame nature comes forth in her most charming colors, although 
many beautiful plants and flowers are to be found at all seasons of the 
year. The only fern that is to be found in Egj'pt is the common maid- 
en-hair {Admnhtni capilliis — Veneris L.). There are many Southern 
European and British plants to be found in the marsh-lands at Gabari, 
near the shore of Lake Mareotis. The most characteristic part of the 
botany of Egj^pt are the aquatic plants that are ge'nerall}- found in 
various canals and many of the ancient water courses of the old river, 
as tvell as the lakes and marshes near the shore, where the water is quiet 
and placid. The average rainfall at Alexandria is twelve inches. 

Alexandria ! Egypt ! what a host of recollections these names recall ! 
They carry me back to the land of stupendous temples and the ruins of 
a prehistoric civilization. After carefully examining the ruined temples 
in the wondrous valley of the Nile, searching among the tombs and 
ruins that lie scattered broadcast from one end of it to the other, I find 
that Masonr}^ has existed through all ages, and has been the admira- 
tion of the most intelligent men of ever}^ epoch of the world's history, 
verifying the statements made by our rituals that " Masonry has been in 
existence from time immemorial," and I most firmly believe that our glor- 
ious Fraternity can date its origin back more than two thousand years 
before the building of the temple by our three Grand Masters. This 
event took place, according to Josephus, in the second month, which the 
Hebrews call Jur, and in the eleventh 3'ear of the reign of our Grand 
Master, Hiram, King of Tyre. I also firmly believe that it would have 
been simply impossible, for such a grand and glorious Fraternity as ours, 
to have sprvmg into an immediate existence simplj^ in building the temple 



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CLEOPATRA'S NEEDLE, ALEXANDRIA, 

NOW STANDING IN NEW YORK CITV. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 17 

upon the threshing-floor of Oman, the Jebusite. Practical, Operative 
Masonry was thoroughly comprehended long centuries before that event, 
as is evidenced by those stupendous and magnificent temples that existed 
in the Land of old Khemi, upon the banks of the Nile, ages before David, 
King of Israel, bought the land from Oman, whereon to erect a temple 
to the most High God, in which to practice the esoteric teachings handed 
down to us from one generation to another. 

There is, at the present day, scattered all over Egypt, India, Syria^ 
the valley of the Euphrates and the plains of Shinar, monuments and 
ruins of temples covered with hieroglyphic inscriptions, showing beyond 
the shadow of a doubt, that Ancient Masonry had its origin long cen- 
turies before the dawn of authentic history ; aye, back beyond the dim 
realms of the ancient myths. These wonderful fabrics were erected 
by our ancient Brethren, who most assuredly possessed a far greater 
knowledge of the mechanical arts and sciences than is known to the 
architects of the present day. Otherwise they could not have built such 
stupendous buildings, or carried across the desert sands such enormous 
blocks of stone, with which to build the temples in which to perpetuate 
the peculiar rites and ceremonies of our most illustrous fraternity, as well 
as to celebrate the most High God of Israel ; and I firmly believe that 
those ancient teachings have been handed down to us, until we find them, 
at the present day, across the threshold of this wonderful twentieth 
century, a monument of glory to the most eminent men of all ages and 
through all time. 

Herodotus informs us that the high priests of Thebes were in 
direct line for three hundred and forty-five generations, and instances are 
recorded wherein the occupation of architect has descended from father 
to son for twenty-two generations. It is a well-known fact that the 
knowledge of the Egyptians was concealed from the lower classes, and if 
they wished to communicate any of their esoteric teachings to the learned 
men of other countries, it was given to them, accompanied with peculiar 
signs and symbols. Certain rites and ceremonies had to be performed 
by the priests at the initiation of the neophyte into the fraternity, and 
every Brother, Elu, Knight, or Prince had proof positive that each 
and all of these sublime Theosophical and Philosophical teachings 
and ceremonies originated in the far away East, the " Land of the 



^8 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Vedas," under the very shadow of the Hindu Kush and Himalaya 
Mountains. 

The student in Masonic lore will find the signs and symbols 
used in our illustrious fraternity to-day identical with those used by our 
ancient Brethren long centuries before Christ, and many of these signs 
and symbols are to be found engraved upon the walls of the tombs and 
temples of the ruined cities throughout Egypt, Assyria and India, from 
the cave temples of Nubia, across the dark waters, and beyond the cave 
temples of Elephanta and into the far interior of the " Land of the 
Vedas." He will realize that there is no portion of these countries in 
which traces of Masonry cannot be found, from the symbolic serpent of 
the Garden of Eden to the symbol of Christianit}^, the cross, or ancient 
Nilometer, that was in use long centuries before Moses was born, even 
to the emblems placed thereon. To the student of symbolism the field is 
inexhaustible, and the true meaning of each and every one of them ought 
to be especially interesting to the members of our ancient fraternity, 
because we practice the rites and perform the ceremonies just as they 
have been handed down to us, ever remembering as Brother Albert Pike 
saj'S in his " Morals and Dogmas," page io6 : 

*' The ceremonies and lessons of these degrees (Blue Lodge) have 
been for ages more and more accommodating themselves by curtailment 
and sinking into commonplace, to the often limited memory and capacity 
of the master and instructor, and to the intellect and needs of the pupil 
and initiate ; that they have come to us from an age when symbols were 
used, not to reveal^ but to conceal^ when the commonest learning was 
confined to a select few, and the simplest principles of morality seemed 
newly discovered truths ; and that these antique and simple degrees 
now stand like the broken columns of a roofless Druidical temple, in 
their rude and mutilated greatness ; in many parts also corrupted by 
time, and disfigured b}' modern additions and absurd interpretations. 
They are but the entrance to the great Masonic temple, the triple 
columns of the portico.'' 

Yet, notwithstanding all these things, we must certainly admit that 
Masonry and its precepts have been miraculously preserved, through the 
long drifting centuries, by our ancient brethren, who endeavored to re-veil 
the symbology that had come down through various epochs from time 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 19 

immemorial. Every initiate must assuredly admit that it is a won- 
derful organization, because through the rise and fall of empires, 
through the changing forms of civilization, in every country throughout 
the world, it has ever and always preserved its onward march, and time's 
devastating hand itself has, through every age, seemingly nurtured and 
fostered our most illustrious fraternity, through the wreck of mighty 
Empires. 

It has withstood the shock and force that destroyed Babylon, 
the Queen city of the world, with her wonderful " Hanging Gardens " 
and stupendous palaces ; Egypt and her golden age has passed away 
with her wondrous knowledge of the mechanical arts and sciences ; 
cultured Greece with her marble miracles, and imperial Rome has bowed 
their mighty heads beneath the dust of centuries ; aye, fallen never to rise 
again ; while Masonry, our glorious fraternity, without any territorial 
possessions, without any particular race or power to sustain it, comes 
forth from the misty veil of the past, sublimely grand and beautiful. It 
stands to-day across the threshold of the twentieth century a monu- 
ment of glory to those Elu's whose watchwords were Morality 
AND Truth, and who were ever and always opposed to Tyranny and 
Fanaticis7n^ devoting their lives from one generation to another to 
the destruction of ignorance^ whose hearts were filled with Benevo- 
lence^ Charity and Brotherly Sympathy to all Men. They were ever 
directed, by Honor and Dicty^ to study the profound symbology of 
Ancient Masonry, to give it their most earnest and profound attention. 
By so doing they might thus be enabled to attain a far greater knowledge 
of its sublime meaning, and be better prepared to help their aspiring 
brother starting up the ladder, to a knowledge of those beautiful 
teachings that contain the same altruistic ideas which have ever led men 
on to Light and Truth, through every age of the world's history. 
These teachings enable them to practice the esoteric truths of high mor- 
ality that bind us all in fraternal bonds of Masonic love, fitting us to lead 
higher and purer lives. In mingling with the outer world they might 
demonstrate to every man that Masonic precepts engender a love of mor- 
ality, virtue and truth that will never die, but will live forever to the 
honor and glory of our most illustrious fraternity and to the Supreme 
Architect of the Universe. 



20 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Tlie ladder to which I referred above, with its seven steps or rungs, 
are to be found in all the ancient mysteries, as a very important symbol, 
that will demonstrate to our aspiring candidate his passage from Rock to 
Man^ or unfold to his wondering gaze nature's evolutionary processes. 
This symbol was used in the Indian Mysteries for the express purpose 
of reminding our aspirant that the " Eio'nal Pilgrim " or soul had to 
pass through seven different stages or planes in order to reach perfection. 

The rites, as performed in India by those Hierophauts of old, taught 
men that perfection is reached by gradual stages, and that knowledge 
could very easily be gained by simply reading the thoughts of others. 
If we desire to become Wise and attain IVisdotn we must climb 
the ladder ourselves, or in other words, JJ^c must think for ourselves. 
In the Mazedean mysteries, in place of the ladder, they used the seven 
ascending caverns that led the aspirant on to the same conclusions — a 
knowledge of Self and its Divine possibilities. In fact, all the rites of 
the ancient Mysteries embodied the same idea of the Septenary^ for in 
each and every one the candidate was conducted through variant states 
or stages, each representing different planes of being, until he stands 
upon the topmost rung of the ladder in the dazzling Light of Wisdom. 
Having thus attained the culminating point, he now understands 
himself, and consequently knows that he stands in the presence of his 
God, and realizes that He and his Father are One, and that ''''He shall go 
no more out?'' 

I do not wish to dilate upon the profound philosophy that under- 
lies our symbology at the very start, but shall endeavor to lead you, 
by gradual stages, to the understanding of many of our beavitiful 
symbols, and show you the road that will enable you to come to an 
understanding of the Holy Doctrine, a knowledge of which will unfold to 
you The Royal Secret. There are Secrets or Hidden Truths, and 
most profound ones, embodied in every emblem belonging to our glorious . 
Fraternity, and we possess the Key to the true meaning of their sublime 
esoteric Truths, and will unfold them as we proceed with our work. 

The temperature in the city of Alexandria is never so high as in 
Cairo or Upper Egypt, which is due to the blowing of the North West 
winds. The mean temperature here ranges from 60° F. in winter, to 
75° in summer. There is considerable humidity in the atmosphere in 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 2l 

all of the coast towns ; hence the heat is much more oppressive than in 
the interior, although the days are much cooler and the nights much 
warmer than in those cities farther inland. 

There are quite a number of Masonic Lodges in the city of 
Alexandria, working under the English, Scotch and other jurisdictions. 
The meetings are held in different buildings in various parts of the city. 
Those of the English meet in the Boulevard Ishmailiya, while those of 
the Scottish Jurisdiction meet in the Place Mohammed Ali. The Royal 
Arch Masons are well represented here, so is the Ancient and Accepted 
Scottish Rite, wherein are taught the glorious symbology of Ancient 
Masonry in all its sublimity and grandeur, from the time that our 
aspiring candidate passes between the two columns that established in 
strength the Wisdom that permeated her Sanctuaries, until he fully 
comprehends the true meaning of " The Mystery of the Balance." 
Then, like the initiates of old, he must do his duty, stretch forth his 
hand, and lift his Brother by the way-side to a knowledge of Truth. In 
lifting the infant Moses from the throbbing bosom of the river Nile, 
Pharaoh's daughter gave to humanity one of the brightest men of the 
world's history. We also, who have ascended the ineffable heights, 
and have learned the esoteric meaning of the various symbols and 
allegories permeating the ceremonies of our glorious Rite should not 
hide its sublime teachings from the Brother who is searching for Light 
and Truth, and who is following the path that we ourselves have trod. 
We should share with him the knowledge that we have gained in our 
arduous climb, for by sharing with him the Light which illuminates 
our path, we may be enabled to help him on to higher planes of 
Spiritual unfoldment and to a knowledge of his Higher Self. 

Masonry has its decalogue, which is a law to its Initiates. 
These are its Ten Commandments : 

FIRST. 

God is the Eternal, Omnipotent, Immutable Wisdom and Supreme 
Intelligence and Exhaustless Love. 

Thou shalt adore, revere, and love Him ! 

Thou shalt honor Him by practising the virtues ! 



22 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

SECOND. 

Thy religion shall be, to do good because it is a pleasure to thee, 
and not merely because it is a duty. 

That thou niayest become the friend of the wise man, thou shalt 
obey his precepts ! 

Thy soul is immortal ! Thou shalt do nothing to degrade it! 

THIRD. 

Thou shalt unceasingly war against vice ! 

Thou shalt not do unto others that which thou wouldst not wish 

them to do unto thee ! 

Thou shalt be submissive to thy fortunes, and keep burning the 

light of wisdom ! 

FOURTH. 

Thou shalt honor thy parents ! 

Thou shalt pay respect and homage to the aged ! 

Thou shalt instruct the young ! 

Thou shalt protect and defend infancy and innocence ! 

FIFTH. 
Thou shalt cherish thy wife and thy children ! 
Thou shalt love thy country, and obey its laws ! 

SIXTH. 
Thy friend shall be to thee a second self! 
Misfortune shall not estrange thee from him ! 

Thou shalt do for his memory whatever thou wouldst do for him, 
if he were living ! 

SEVENTH. 

Thou shalt avoid and flee from insincere friendships ! 

Thou shalt in everything refrain from excess ! 

Thou shalt fear to be the cause of a stain on th}' memory ! 

EIGHTH. 
Thou shalt allow no passion to become thy master ! 
Thou shalt make the passions of others profitable lessons to thy- 
self! 

Thou shalt be indulgent to error ! 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 23 

NINTH. 
Thou shalt hear much : Thou shalt speak little : Thou shalt 
act Avell ! 

Thou shalt forget injuries ! 

Thou shalt render good for evil ! 

Thou shalt not misuse either thy strength or thy superiority ! 

TENTH. 

Thou shalt study to know men ; that thereby thou mayest learn 
to know thyself! 

Thou shalt ever seek after virtue ! 

Thou shalt be just! 

Thou shalt avoid idleness ! 

But the great commandment of Masonry is this : " A new com- 
mandment give I unto you : that ye love one another ! He that 
saith he is in the light, and hateth his brother, remaineth still in 
the darkness." 

Brother Pike says : " Such are the moral duties of a Mason. 
But it is also the duty of Masonry to assist in elevating the moral 
and intellectual level of society ; in coining knowledge, bringing 
ideas into circulation, and causing the mind of youth to grow ; and 
in putting, gradually, by the teachings of axioms and the promul- 
gation of positive laws, the human race, in harmony with its des- 
tinies.'' 



Huinetr Ccmplcs— IHasonnj auti tts ^ijnibols. 



Cbc ruins of 6gypt arc the tattered pages, 
"Cbc archives of the nation passed away, 
dhosc Ricropbants and ancient sages 
Lived 'mid the scenes that we tread to-day; 
de wander midst the stupendous glory 
Of ancient 6gypt, in her golden age, 
Hnd as we ramble read the story, 
0»cn, passing on, we turn the page. 



26 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 27 




CHAPTER II. 

RUINED TEMPLES-MASONRY AND MASONIC SYMBOLS. 

^AIS was the most important city during the Saitic Empire, and 
the one which gave its name to the period when the Theban 
Empire yielded her exalted position to the growing power of the 
cities of the Delta, extending from the twentieth dynasty to the conquest 
of the valley of the Nile by Alexander the Great in the year B. c. 332. 
During this period many magnificent temples and tombs were erected 
that were the admiration of the learned men of Greece and other coun- 
tries, many of whom went to Egypt for the express purpose of acquir- 
ing knowledge and information not obtainable in their own countries, 
and where they perfected their studies in science, art, and phil- 
osophy peculiar to the Golden Age of Egypt. The tutelar deity 
of this ancient cit}^ of Sais, was the goddess Neith, whom the Greeks 
identified with their Athene. She is very often represented with a 
weaver's shuttle, and is also frequently seen armed with bow and 
arrows, corresponding to the warlike goddess of the Greek Minerva, 
worshipped both b}- the Egyptians and the Libyans. There is no 
question in my mind, but, that this identification of Neith with Athene 
caused Pausanias to believe that Pallas-Athene originally came from 
Libia, to which Sais was frequently considered to belong. If the Egypt- 
ians did really conceive of the goddess Neith as weaving, it was only 
in a figurative sense, as creating. Upon her temple was inscribed : 
" / am the things that have been, and that are, and that will be ; no 
one hath ever me unveiled?'' 

Herodotus gained a vast amount of knowledge and information from 
the priests of this city, as well as from his personal observations, and so 
did hundreds of other prominent men who came from all parts of Greece 
and distant countries to acquire a knowledge of the profound philoso- 
phies, sciences and architecture, which belonged to these ancient people, 



28 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

who not only erected the Pyramids and Sphinx, but adorned their 
wondrous valley and Delta of the Nile with such stupendous monu- 
ments, that they have been the admiration of the world down to the 
present day. 

It was here in Sais that Solon associated with the Hierophants of 
Egypt, and Cambyses also visited this celebrated city after he had con- 
quered the " Land of Egypt." He not only admitted his being an 
initiate, but he showed himself favorable to the rites and ceremonies of 
the mysteries, as practiced in the temple of Neith, by permitting it to 
stand as a monument to the fraternity in all its magnificence, just as he 
found it, and the very fact of his doing so proves that he was not only 
an initiate, but an Hierophant, who, like others before him had seen 
the " Light." His name was " Ameth." He had passed through the 
puritying elements, and had most assuredly witnessed the glory which 
filled the sanctuary be3^ond the veil shrouding the ivory portal. In see- 
ing this inefi"able mystic glory and having been thoroughly instructed 
in the esoteric teachings, like other Initiates, he recognized the presence 
of the Supreme Architect, as manifested in the beauty and grandeur 
of the outer world. His mind must have been enlightened by the 
" Hol}^ Doctrine," a knowledge of which not onl}^ purifies the heart 
from sin, but drives ignorance from the mind, and insures the favor 
of the gods, thus opening the gates of immortal felicity to all who 
have passed beyond the veil. 

The barriers have now been rent asunder and the initiate begins to 
understand himself and realizes that although he is blind to his sur- 
roundings and the knowledge which permeates the Kosmos, yet he 
carries the light of all knowledge within his heart, aye, within his own 
hand, that will light him on to the highest planes of intellectual and 
spiritual development. He will appreciate the fact that by the exercise 
of the inner vision all Wisdom is at his command. Every man who 
stepped across the mystic portals of the ancient Mysteries followed in 
the same paths trodden b}- those who had gone before. They learned 
the same lessons, received the same Light and vowed the same vows. 
In this wa3^ the}^ were bound b}^ a tie stronger than " chains of brass," 
and consequentl}' they would always endeavor to build up rather tlian 
tear down. Thus it was that Cambyses permitted this celebrated struc- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 29 

ture to stand. He himself had fed the sacred fire upon the altar and had 
identified himself with the Hierophants who presided over the Ancient 
Mysteries within this celebrated temple. 

To-day there is no trace of this wondrous temple, or the royal 
palace and mausoleum of the Pharoah's connected with it. Nothing 
now remains of the glory pertaining to this once celebrated city, but a 
few fellaheen dwellings, claiming the name of Sais, whose glory reached 
the four corners of the earth. But, to-day, the villagers only assume 
the first two letters of the old name and call it Sa. In the ancient city 
of Sais there was a chapel that had been hewn out of a single block 
of granite, brought from the quarries of Syene, the weight of which 
must have been fully three hundred tons. 

Herodotus tells us of the magnificence of this wondrous city and 
the grandeur of the tomb of Osiris, whose columns were adorned with 
palm-capitals ; the statues and the rows of andro-sphinxes which led 
up to the entrance of the temple were most magnificent specimens of 
the best Egyptian sculpture. He also tells us of the sacred lake, etc., 
but at the present time there is ver}^ little of it to be seen to give us an 
idea of its size and beauty, excepting an irregular sheet of water and 
portions of an immense wall that is sixty-five feet wide and about one 
thousand five hundred feet long. This wall, however, verifies the state- 
ment of Herodotus respecting the lake, and to satisfy one that it must 
have been a magnificent city, in its palmy days, as they never built 
such stupendous walls around ordinary cities. Few relics of this once 
famous city have been brought to light, and all that greets the eye of 
the traveller or tourist now visiting this place, is ruin, utter ruin. 

San-Tanis^ or ZOAN, was a city of very great prominence during 
the time of Moses, and it was in this place that both he and Aaron 
compelled Pharaoh to let the Israelites go " out of the land of Egypt 
and out of the house of bondage;" through the wonders they per- 
formed in the field of Zoan [Exodiis y: lo^ and Psalms j8 : 12-^j). 
The site of this celebrated city is occupied to-day by Arab fishermen, 
who call their village San^ which is the Arab form of the ancient Zan 
or Zoan. The inhabitants of this place are the lineal descendants of 
the Blamites and Bashrausites. They were also known as Malekites, 
wlio were, during the Christian domination, firm adherents of the 



30 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

orthodox churcli, but who were quite willing to embrace El-IslaTU when 
the opportunity offered. 

These people are, in many respects, like their great ancestors, 
rude and uncultured, and extremely uncivil, treating all tourists and 
travellers with scant respect, but especially is this so if they be 
Christians. If it were not for the expectation of obtaining a goodly 
" baksheesh " from those who go to this place in order to examine 
the ruins and site of the "Field of Zoan," they would be far more 
uncourteous. The Greeks call this village Tanis, but the Egyptian 
name agrees with that in the Scriptures, which corresponds to the 
monumental name of this celebrated city. The truth of this assertion 
has verification from the statue found here, which is to be seen in the 
Museum of Antiquities, bearing an inscription stating that the individual 
it represents was " a governor in his town, a magnate in his province 
and a prefect in the towns and fields of Tan, ' meaning Zan or Zoan.' " 

It was here the celebrated stone was found that was called by the 
French " La Pierre de San." It was that famous trilingual stone, con- 
taining Greek, hieroglyphic and Demotic characters, known to the 
Egyptologists as the " Decree of Kanopus," that constituted an edict 
promulgated by Ptolemy Euergetus in the year b. c. 237 at Kanopus, 
then the religious capital of the country. The original stone is 
now to be found in the Museum of Antiquities, Gizeh, near Cairo. 
There are two plaster casts of this stone, one of which has been 
placed in the British Museum, the other in the Aberdeen Univer- 
sity, Scotland. This limestone tablet or " stele " was discovered by 
Dr. Lepsius in the year 1866. It was the writing on this stone 
which established the correctness of the method of deciphering the 
inscriptions on the celebrated " Rosette Stone," or stele, by Cham- 
polin and others. 

Stele is the name that is given to tablets of granite, limestone, 
wood, or faience, so often found amid the ruins of tombs andN temples in 
the valley of the Nile. They were used for the purpose of inscribing 
upon them the various decrees, historical records, victories of the various 
Pharaohs or kings of Egypt and biographical notices of prominent men 
and officials — in fact any thing of importance would be inscribed upon 
these stelse. The largest number of these stones have been found 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 31 

placed inside the tombs, generally in the passage-way leading into the 
mummy chamber. They have also frequently been found placed just 
inside the door or entrance to the sepulchre, as well as at the bier, and a 
great many are to be seen set into the walls of various tombs throughout 
Kgypt. They vary in size and shape, according to the fashion of the 
dynasty in which the individual lived. Sometimes they were rectangu- 
lar, at other times lozenge or oval-shaped, but each and every one of 
them were inscribed with the name of the deceased, generally setting 
forth the principal events of their lives, as well as their pedigree, 
titles, etc., etc. 

It is very difficult to tell the exact date of the origin of this 
city or by whom founded, but from the Scriptural account we 
are enabled to learn that the city of Zoan was built seven 3'ears 
after Hebi'on was established {see Numbers /j .• 22). The branch of 
the Nile on which this famous cit}^ of Zoan was situated was called 
the Tanitic. It was the most easterly branch of this grand old 
river and nearest to Palestine and Arabia, if we except that of the 
Pelusiac. There is no question but that the city grew in import- 
ance and power during the New Empire and when the Hyksos, in 
their warlike expeditions overran and dominated this northern part 
of Egypt, tbey found established here a race kindred to their own; 
consequently they made this city their capital, and at once proceeded 
to adorn and beautify it with most magnificent buildings and sculp- 
tures of all kinds, employing none but Egyptian artists to do the 
work, specimens of which were discovered hy Mariette Bey, who threw 
a vast amount of light upon this period of Egyptian history. The 
rather peculiar type of sphinxes that he found here he attributed 
to these shepherd kings. He also stated that the probabilities were, 
that at the time one of these kings was reigning in Memphis, Joseph was 
sold into Egypt and may have served under him, for, as he says, 
this Pharaoh was not a pure born Eg3^ptian, but of foreign parentage, 
of. shepherd descent, like himself, and the treatment Joseph received, 
based upon this supposition, is far more easily understood. 

Under the thirteenth dynasty this city received a great impetus. 
Quite a large number of v&ry fine monuments and colossi were 
erected by Amenemhat and the two Usertesens, remains of which are 



32 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

to be found in the Museum of Gizeh, all testifying to the importance 
of Zoan at that period. Although the city had reached such importance 
at that time, the sanctuary of the great temple dates back to the sixth 
dynasty, B. c. 3703, plainly showing the rise and fall of this wonderful 
city during various epochs of Egyptian history. 

During the lives of the monarchs of the twenty-ninth dynasty 
it was decorated and adorned with magnificent statues, obelisks and 
most exquisite works of art, and the rulers of this dynasty, Sethi, 
Rameses II and Meneptha often came here to hold their court and 
join in the sacred rites and ceremonies of the ancient mysteries. 

It was under the twenty-first dynasty, B. c. mo, that Tanis or 
Zoan became the capital of Egypt oncfe more, and gave its name to the 
d3'nasty, and also to that branch of the river Nile on which it was 
situated. Under this administration the public buildings and temples 
were restored ; the needs of the city carefully attended to, and its 
avenues beautified, but it again fell to a city of secondary consideration, 
although Marietta claimed that it was a town of great importance from 
the twenty-second to tlie twenty-sixth dynasty. He gave the name 
Tanite to the twenty-third dynast3^ The city again began to decline 
during the reign of Amasis, by whom the capital of Egypt was removed 
to Sais, making Naucratis the sole port of entry for Egypt, and com- 
pelling all vessels to go there to load or discharge their freight. In 
consequence of which Naucratis soon grew into prominence, becoming 
one of the best known cities in Eg3'pt. It was located about fifteen 
miles west of the capital of Egypt (Sais.) This decree of Amasis making 
Naucratis the sole port of entry for Egypt Avas the cause of its rapid 
growth, for it gave to this place special privileges. 

Herodotus tells us that this king (Amasis) " was partial to the 
Greeks,'' and induced them to come and settle in Egj^pt. Amasis 
had recognized their bravery and power during his war with Apries, 
consequently, when they immigrated to this land of Egypt and estab- 
lished themselves at Naucratis, this great king did all in his power to 
help them, because he knew he would be enabled to depend upon them 
in case of war. He afterwards verified his good opinion of them, 
for when the Persians invaded Egypt he mustered them into the 
Egyptian forces, and led them on to assist him in repelling the invaders. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 33 

They responded to his call and assisted him in establishing himself 
more firmly in the hearts of his countrymen and in the land of Egypt. 

Amasis was born in the town of Niouph, of poor and humble 
parents, but, through his wonderful abilities, his high intellectual power 
and force of character, he rose to the high and exalted position of ruler, 
or Pharaoh over Egypt, and over this great and mighty people. In 
attaining this exalted position he was not looked upon as a legitimate 
kiug by the higher classes, because th.&y considered it to be an infringe- 
ment upon the ancient constitutions of the Egyptians. The kings of 
Egypt had always been chosen from among the priests or soldiers of the 
country, but as he belonged to neither one nor the other he was consid- 
ered to be ineligible, and the prominent men endeavored to have him 
deposed. As he was supported by the people, who had placed him 
upon the throne, they were compelled to abandon their opposition and 
acknowledge him as King and Pharaoh of Egypt. 

Herodotus tells us in the second book {Euterpe, chapter 172), "At 
first his subjects looked down upon him, and held him in but small 
esteem, because he had been a mere private person, and of a house of no 
great distinction ; but after a time Amasis succeeded in reconciling them 
to his rule, not by severity, but by cleverness. Among his other 
splendors he had a golden foot-pan, in which his guests and himself 
were wont, upon occasion, to wash their feet. This vessel he caused to 
be broken in pieces, and made of the gold an image of one of the gods, 
which he set up in the most public place in the whole city ; upon which 
the Egyptians flocked to the image, and worshipped it with the utmost 
reverence. Amasis finding this was so, called an assembly and opened 
the matter to them, explaining how the image had been made of the 
foot-pan, wherein they had been wont formerly to wash their feet, and to 
put all manner of filth within it, yet now it was reverenced. And truly, 
he went on to say, it had gone with him, as with the fot)t-pan. If he 
was a private person formerly, 3'et now he had come to be their king. 
And so he bade them honor and reverence him. Siich was the mode in 
which he won over the Egyptians, and brought them to be content in 
his service." 

Amasis was one of the first kings of whose personal character we 
know anything, and from the records that have been preserved we find 



34 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

that he had a very strict sense of honor and justice. It is positively 
known that he devoted himself to the interests of his country and 
the intellectual advancement of his fellow men. He possessed those 
qualities which not only endeared him to his soldiers and countrymen, 
but commanded the respect of the prominent men of all other nations. 
He loved pleasure, but when business of the nation required his 
services, he gave the whole of his time and attention to those require- 
ments. He was a wise king, ruler, and Hierophant of the Mysteries, 
and enforced the law, compelling every Egyptian to appear once a 
year and demonstrate to the Governor of the Nome, in which he 
lived, that he was earning an honest living, to enable him to support 
his wife and family ; failing to prove this the penalty was Death. 
Draco made this same law in Athens, but afterward Solon repealed 
it on account of its severity. This Egyptian King and Hierophant 
thoroughly understood the " Pole Star of Truth," and endeavored by 
his own conduct to demonstrate to all men that the teachings received 
from the ancient m3'steries were most sublimely grand and beautiful. 
He knew full well there was no royal road to the understanding of 
its profound sjanbology, science and philosophies, and in order to attain 
to a k-nowledge of the rites, ceremonies and esoteric teachings of the 
various degrees, he would have to devote his time to it b}^ earnest studj^, 
profound attention and the soul's deep meditation, before he would be 
enabled to comprehend the ineffable beaiity of the rites and ceremonies. 
Like others who have passed beyond the mj-stic portals, he realized that 
without it he would simply pass through the ceremonies of the ancient 
m3^steries of Egypt, but the sublimity and grandeur of the teachings 
would be as incomprehensible as the veiled statue of Neith, (Isis) in 
the temple of Sais. 

" Masonr}^ is a peculiar system of morality, veiled in allegor}', and 
illustrated bj- symbols." But we must distinctly understand that 
ritualism is not Masonry. The glorious teachings embodied in the 
ethics of Masonr}^ are, and ever will be, in existence, having been 
taught and promulgated through ever}- age. And it did not require 
the building of tjae temple b}' Solomon to demonstrate the profound 
morality' that belonged to our glorious Fraternit}^, for it has had a 
continuous existence through every epoch of the world's history. 




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Q 

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Ix) 

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LlI 



LlI 

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Ll. 
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DC 

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UJ 

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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 35 

The profound wisdom contained in the veiled symbols is most beau- 
tiful and sublimely grand, and, as I have hereinbefore stated, the 
real meaning of the various symbols, belonging to Masonry, must be 
carefully searched out before the student can ever hope to understand the 
faintest glimmer of their true meaning. This cannot be told the 
aspiring candidate too often, that, in order to come to an understanding 
of the true meanings that are embodied in our symbology, he must learn 
the meaning contained in the very first degree, as herein lies the key or 
combination to those above. 

Through all countries in the world, from the cave temples of India 
to those of Nubia, through the valley of the Nile and its Delta, as well as 
in Chaldea, Assyria, Greece, Rome and even amid the tropical growth of 
long drifting centuries in Mexico and Yucatan, are to be found, at 
the present day, in all these places, monuments and ruins of temples 
covered with signs, symbols and hieroglyphic inscriptions going to 
prove, beyond the shadow of a doubt, that our glorious fraternity 
has existed in each and every one of them. If 3'ou will take time 
to search for yourselves, as I have done, you will find that Free 
Masonry must have originated in India, and that it was cradled 
upon the banks of the Nile, beyond the dawn of authenticated history. 
Here in this extremely interesting valley will be found ocular demon- 
strations that our ancient brethren were not onl}- speculative, but 
practical, operative Masons, who beautified and adorned the world with 
magnificent specimens of their work, from the Gopuras and temples of 
India, the Pyramids and stupendous fabrics of Egypt to the marble 
miracles of Greece and the grandest ruin of Rome — the Coliseum. 

In the valley of the Nile our ancient brethren have demonstrated 
their knowledge in gigantic temples and colossal monolithic statues. 
The "Arundel Marbles" in the British Museum speak louder than a 
thousand tongues to testify to the sublimity to which they had attained 
in sculpture. The Acropolis and Parthenon are in ruins, but even as 
they are, in their mutilated grandeur, they testify to the men of cultured 
Greece and to the names of those craftsmen who wrought them. All 
these things go to prove that our practical, operative brethren of a prehis- 
toric age thoroughly comprehended the mechanical arts and sciences, 
otherwise they never could have quarried and carried across the desert 



36 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

sands, such stupendous blocks of granite with which to build their 
imposing temples, wherein they practiced the rites and performed the 
ceremonies in a manner similar to our ancient craftsmen long before 
Moses officiated in the temples of Egypt. These same sublimely beau- 
tiful ceremonies stand to-da}^, across the threshold of the twentieth 
century, as a monument of glory to our most ancient and illustrious 
Rite and the Supreme Architect of the Universe. Those who believe in 
the Supreme Architect of the Universe can unite with us, in the Masonic 
fold, upon the level and true points of fellowship which unite and bind 
us all in fraternal bonds of Masonic love, teaching to each and every one 
the glory of the Fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man. 

Albert Pike states, in " Morals and Dogmas," page 726, that " Relig- 
ion is the crown of morality, not its base. The base of morality is itself. 
The moral code of Masonry is still more extensive than that developed by 
philosophy. To the requisitions of the law of nature and the law of God, 
it adds the imperative obligation of a contract. Upon entering the Fra- 
ternity, the initiate binds to himself every Mason in the world. Once 
enrolled among the Children of Light^ every Mason on earth becomes his 
brother, and owes him the duties, the kindness, and sympathies of a bro- 
ther. On every one he may call for assistance in need, protection against 
danger, sympathy in sorrow, attention in sickness, and decent burial after 
death. There is not a Mason in the world who is not bound to go to his 
relief when he is in danger, if there be a greater probability of saving his 
life than losing his own. No Mason can wrong him to the value of any- 
thing, knowingly, himself, nor suffer it to be done by others, if it be in 
his power to prevent it. No Mason can speak evil of him, to his face or 
behind his back. Every Mason must keep his lawful secrets, and aid 
him in his business, defend his character when unjustly assailed, and 
protect, counsel, and assist his widow and orphans. What so many thou- 
sands owe to him, he owes to each of them. He has solemnly bound 
himself to be ever ready to discharge this sacred debt. If he fails to do it, 
he is dishonest and forsworn ; and it is an unparalleled meanness in him 
to obtain good offices by false pretences, to receive kindness and service, 
rendered him iinder the confident expectation that he will in his turn 
render the same, and then to disappoint, without ample reason, and just 
expectation. Masonry holds him also by his solemn promise to a purer 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 37 

life, a nobler generosity, a more perfect charity of opinion and action ; to 
be tolerant, catholic in his love for his race, ardent in his zeal for the 
interest of mankind, and the advancement and progress of humanity." 

We are positively certain that the esoteric teachings of both the 
Lesser and the Greater Mysteries were never revealed to any one who 
was not considered to be worthy and well qualified to receive them, but 
we must distinctly understand that all those who had received the light 
from the Lesser were not always considered worthy to pass across the 
threshold of the Greater Mysteries. In order to be enabled to attain to 
these rites and ceremonies, they had to stand the test of being proven 
worthy to receive them, and if they were permitted to enter through 
the sacred portals, they had to pass through the most profound and 
sublime ceremonies before they were entrusted with the key to the 
symbology which would enlighten them, and lift the veil to their search- 
ing and bewildered gaze, thus revealing the ineffable glories that lay 
beyond the mystic portals. 

It must be thoroughly understood that in joining a Masonic Lodge a 
man does not immediately become a truer, purer, or better man ; it simply 
shows him the light of truth, and impresses upon him " T/m/ there is no 
Religion higher than TrutliJ' Neither will he at first see the beauties, 
nor understand the mystic ceremonies, for he will be blinded, as it were, 
by the effulgent light that permeates the sanctuaries of our glorious Fra- 
ternity, when he will at once realize that the keynote to a thorough know- 
ledge and understanding of the sublimity and grandeur of the ceremonies 
of our beloved Scottish Rite is meditation and earnest study. 

Any Mason, be he Elu, Knight, or Prince, who is interested in the 
origin of the symbols and teachings of our ancient and accepted Scottish 
Rite of Free Masonry, can in India, Egypt and other countries, have ocu- 
lar demonstration, in signs, symbols, and Masonic emblems, which have 
been in existance thousands of years before the building of the temple by 
our three Grand Masters, wherein to practice the esoteric teachings of 
our most illustrious fraternity, teachings that have been the admiration 
of the most profound men of every epoch in the world's history. 

Symbols appeal to the eye, and impress themselves upon our 
memory, as oral instructors to the ear. The level is symbolical of 
equality and teaches us the universal brotherhood of man. The square 



38 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

is au emblem of justice, for, as Brother Fellows states, " It was the 
means in Egypt of establishing the boundaides of lands that had 
been obscured or carried away by the inundations." It is a very ancient 
symbol and like many others we cannot trace it to any particular 
nation or people. It does not derive its chief importance from the 
operative Mason, but rather from the speculative. We know that 
it was held, as a most profound sacred symbol, among the ancient 
Egyptians, for it was always carried in all their grand and solemn proces- 
sions, by certain officials who were called Stolists. In our symbolic 
degrees it teaches ns honesty of purpose, and fair dealing to ail men. 
The plumb teaches us to learn to subdue our lower animal passionate 
nature ; it is the symbol of unerring i-ectitude. The mosaic pavement is 
most assuredly symbolical of the human life, checkered with good and 
evil, forcibly emblematic of man's career, as each day we stand upon 
the bright square of hope or the black square of misfortune or adversity^ 
To-day we are crowned with joy and happiness, to-morrow we may be filled 
with sorrow and tribulation. It teaches us to walk upright before all 
men, in humbleness of heart, and to assist our weary brother by the way- 
side, for we do not know the day nor the hour when we, ourselves, may 
need the help of those we have assisted. The tesselated border symbol- 
izes the manifold blessings and comforts continually surrounding us, 
but the blazing star in the centre comes down to us from those ancient 
adepts, who named not only the signs of the Zodiac, but every star that 
glitters in the infinitude of space. 

Let us go back beyond the " Golden Age of Egypt," when the arts 
and sciences were flourishing, which, centuries later, furnished the embers 
from which leaped Grecian culture and Roman civilization. What a 
sweep backward must the imagination take in order to appreciate the 
almost bewildering stretch of time from the present da}', of this twentieth 
century, to the earliest ages of Egyptian civilization, when the people of 
this wondrous valle}^ watched for the sign which assured them of all that 
was necessary for the siistenance of themselves, and the pi'eserv^tion of 
their domestic animals ! And this sign was a brilliant, luminous star, 
appearing upon the eastern horizon in the early evening, which they 
called Sothis, or Anubis the barker, the same as we call Sirius, the dog 
star). Its appearance warned the people who occupied the lowlands 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 39 

adjacent to the river Nile, of approaching danger, that they might be 
enabled to go to higher ground and escape the flooding waters. About 
this time these waters came rushing down from its interior sources, from 
unknown regions in Central Africa, bearing within its bosom immense 
quantities of decayed organic substance that deposited itself evenly over 
the whole of the flooded country. This acted upon the parched and 
thirsty soil as a rich and powerful fertilizing agent, fructifying and 
causing all things planted to grow in abundance. All the fellaheen had 
to do was to scatter their seed broadcast upon the soil, trample them 
in with their domestic animals, and when the waters subsided watch 
their crops grow luxuriantly and reap a thousand fold what they had 
sown. No wonder, then, they eagerly longed for the coming of this 
glorious symbol which was to them a harbinger of the fruits of the earth 
and the fulness thereof, for to them the glorious river Nile was an 
emblem of God the Father, who brought to their very doors the 
necessaries of life. So we find it upon the floors of our temples — an 
emblem of faith in the goodness of the Supreme Architect of the 
Universe. 

The overflowing of the river Nile was considered by the ancient 
Egyptians a demonstration of the activity of the Osirian Triad, because 
they considered that Isis personified the earth of the Nile valley and 
Delta, but not the whole earth universal like Seb^ who was the 
representative of the earth in all its wonderful manifestations and 
differentiations. But they believed that Isis personified the rich black 
land of the Delta and valley of the Nile, on both banks of the river, as 
far as Thebes, and beyond, to the first cataract, where all things grew in 
such luxuriant abundance, and that she would continue to give to the 
ever succeeding generations, from her inexhaustible productive forces, all 
that was necessary for the sustenance of Man and his domestic animals 
living in this wondrous valley of the Nile. How did she produce these 
wonderful manifestations ? Simply by the union of Osiris with Isis. 
Osiris personified the river Nile, which overflows its banks and takes Isis 
in his loving embrace, thereby uniting, every year, the river Osiris to 
his beloved Isis, and from this union comes forth the virgin harvest 
which represented Horns the Son, and thus we have the Egyptian triad 
of Osiris, Isis and Horus. 



40 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Egypt ! how well I remember thy fertile valley, thy glorious river, 
and the evidences of thy former grandeur, whose splendors not only filled 
the ancient world with admiration and wonder, but compel the learned 
men of to-day to stand with awe before thy mighty monolithic statues 
and gigantic structi;res, whose very ruins represent the tattered pages of 
the archives of one of the grandest nations the world has ever known, 
and the evidences of a remote and wonderful civilization ! We can 
gather a vast amount of kuowledge and information respecting her 
manners and customs, science, arts and philosophies in the study of 
her tombs, temples and monolithic sculptures, as these things represent 
the stony leaves that have been written with pens of steel. Although 
her temples have fallen into decay and her innumerable statues and 
obelisks destroyed, broken into fragments and carried off by vandals, 
there remains no doubt a very large number of priceless treasures, 
still lying shrouded beneath the drifting desert sands, whose covering is 
even now being removed. We may possibly be enabled to recover 
many of the treasured secrets of the " Golden Age of Egypt " that 
will throw " more light " on the knowledge and Wisdom pertaining to 
Ancient Egj'ptians and the Craftsmen who wrought in the quarries in 
those golden days of long ago, in order to erect the temples which to-day 
lie scattered broadcast throughout the length and breadth of this most 
extraordinary valley. 

In viewing these magnificent ruins I was filled with marvellous 
admiration for the majesty of their proportions, their wonderful strength 
and beauty, and the extraordinary knowledge of the mechanical arts and 
sciences possessed by the ancient craftsmen in their construction. I 
recognized that they represented the thoughts of men who lived in the 
hoary ages of a far away past, whose very names, if known, would 
command our most profound respect and admiration — men who rocked 
the cradle of Ancient Masonry in the land of the mighty Pharaohs, long 
centuries ago. There is but little to interest the traveller of to-day in 
"The field of Zoan," and he will realize that what was once the splendid 
palaces and temples of Egypt's mighty warlike kings, are now dwelling 
places for the lowly fishermen of San, amid ruins of tombs, temples, 
monuments and fragmentary statues that lie scattered around in the 
wildest confusion imaginable. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 41 

The drifting sands are slowly and silently covering up the 
remains of what was once one of the grandest cities of Lower Egypt^ 
whose fame reached the four corners of the earth. The principal 
divinities worshipped in " The field of Zoan " were Ptah, Amen, and 
an Asiatic divinity called Set, or Sutek, but which was afterwards 
worshipped under the form of Ra, Horus, etc. The country in the 
vicinity of Tanis is low and marshy land, with scarcely any vegetation 
excepting reeds and dwarfed tamarask bushes, among which wild boars 
are often to be found. A canal runs through it now, and still it does not 
fertilize the soil. " Fire passed through Zoan, and it is desolate." 
(Ezekiel 30 : 14.) 

There are immense numbers of all kinds of water fowl that will 
afford good sport to the traveller or tourist, and help to replenish their 
larder if they camp as they go along. Whoever comes to this place 
should not forget to bring a goodly supply of insect powder and oil of 
pennyroyal — the first for the fleas whose name are legion, and outnumber 
those of San Francisco ten to one ; the oil of pennyroyal to ward off 
attacks of the blood-thirsty mosquito and the pertinacity of the miserable 
Egyptian fly. 

Egypt was divided into Nomes or Cantons, for administrative pt:r- 
poses, and each Nome was presided over by a Governor or Monarcli^ 
appointed by the king himself A Nome consisted of one of the 
principal cities, and the surrounding villages that were in a measure 
dependent upon it. The duty of each Monarch was to superintend his 
Canton, see to the collecting of revenues, etc., in fact, all the details of 
the Government were attended to either by him or his deputies, and he 
was held personally responsible for all their acts, as well as his own. In 
the Delta there were, according to Strabo, (Book 17: 787,] ten of these 
Nomes, and the same in the Thebiad, while the intermediate country was 
credited with seven, growing at a later date into sixteen. Each Nome 
had definitely established boundaries, originally laid out by order of 
the early rulers. These Nomes eventually grew to the number of fifty, 
three among them being included in the Greater and Lesser Oasis and the 
Oasis of Anion. All these were divided into Toparchies^ but of what size 
we are unable to say. Each of these Nomes sent delegates, who were 
accompanied, by the chief priests and priestesses, of the principal temple 



42 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

in their Nome, to the general convention that met, at stated times, in the 
magnificent palace of the Labyrinth, near Lake Moeris (of which I shall 
speak later on). At these conventions, possibly, the king presided and 
administered justice in accordance with the Law, and it was, no doubt, 
used for the same purpose as our legislature. 

B/ibasiis. — This ancient city is now called Tel Basta. The Pi-beseth 
of the Scriptures (Bzekiel 30: 17), is situated on the west bank of the 
Pelusiac branch of the Nile, about fourteen miles north of Belbeys, in 
very low marsy land pregnant with malaria, fever, etc. This was 
the site of one of the most ancient cities of Lower Egypt, and the ruins 
to be seen there to-day attest to her former magnificence and grandeur. 
The lofty mounds of brick that protected the city from the annual 
inundations of the Nile are sujEcient proof of its antiquity. 

Herodotus (in Book II, chapter 137) claims that these mounds were 
formed by Egyptians who, having committed some offence, were com- 
pelled to raise the ground in the vicinity of the city to which they 
belonged. In conseqtience of this a great many cities in the Delta of the 
Nile rose far above the plain, safe from the flooding waters of old 
God Nilus. He especially mentions Bubastis as having been raised to a 
greater elevation than any other city in Egypt, which was a noticeable 
fact in his time as well as in our own. As early as the reign of Uscr- 
Maai-Ra, Rameses II., (The Great), these mounds began to rise around 
the city when that great warrior king connected the waters of the Red 
Sea wdth the river Nile, b. c. 1340. This city was no doubt of consider- 
able importance, at least thirty-four centuries ago, during the reign of the 
" wall builder," Thotmes III. It received its death blow when Amasis 
made Sais his capital and fixed the seat of his power in his favorite city 
{see anic)^ and Bubastis, like Tanis, and other cities of importance, began 
to sink into insignificance. 

Bubastis attained its highest importance and power under the 
twenty-second dynasty, whose first king was Sesonchis, the conqueror 
of Thebes, who united in himself the two crowns of Upper and Lower 
Egypt, besides making his native city the capital, and source from which 
emanated all his mandates. The student of ancient Egyptian history 
and Masonic tradition will recognize the magnificence to which this city 
had risen under the various d3masties, ranging from the Second 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 43 

Mempbite of the Old Monarchy (see Manetho) until its decline and 
subsequent fall. It began to lose its power when Amasis issued bis 
famous edict making Naucratis the only port of entry in Egypt. The 
annals of the celebiated red granite temple of this city, extending back 
beyond authenticated history, cbnstituted the glory of each succeeding 
dynasty. Its ruins of to-day form one of the grandest pages of the 
archives of ancient Egyptian history. 

This magnificant city and red temple won the admiration of 
Herodotus (see Book II., Chapters 137-8), whose description is very 
accurate. In relation to it he says : " Here is the goddess Bubastis, 
which well deserves to be described. Other temples may be grander, 
and may have cost more in the building, but there is none so 
pleasant to the eye as this of Bubastis." Then he goes on to 
describe it as follows : " Excepting the entrance, the whole forms an 
island. Two artificial channels from the Nile, one on either hand of the 
temple encompass the building, leaving only a narrow passage by which 
it is approached. These channels are each a hundred feet wide and they 
are thickly shaded with trees. The gateway is sixty feet in height, and 
ornamented with figures cut upon stone six cubits high and well worthy 
of notice. The temple stands in the middle of the city, and is visible 
on all sides, as one walks around it. The city has been raised by means 
of an embankment, while the temple has been left untouched in its orig- 
inal condition. You can look down upon it wherever you are. A low 
wall runs around the enclosure, having figures engraved upon it, and 
inside there is a grove of beautiful tall trees, surrounding the shrine con- 
taining the image of the goddess. This enclosure is a furlong in length, 
and the same in breadth. The entrance to it is by a road, paved with 
stone for a distance of about three furlongs, which passes straight 
through the market place in an easterly direction and is four hundred 
feet in width. Trees of an extraordinary height grow on each side the 
road leading from the temple of Bubastis to that of Mercury." 

This temple was sacred to the goddess Bast, who personified the 
spring-time warmth of the sun. Pasht, the Bubastis of the Egyptians, 
is often represented with the head of a cat, or, in the older sculptures, 
with a lion's head crowned with a disk and uraes, like the sun god 
Ra. The disk and lion indicate her connection with the solar deity, 



44 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

while the iiraes was a symbol of immortality, and was generally worn 
upon the forehead of a king or queen. It is also an emblem of royalt5^ 
This deadly asp rears itself on the brow ready to strike and defend 
the wearer from his or her enemies. Bubastis of the Egyptians, 
is the same as the Artemis (Diana) of the Greeks, {//er. 2 : 18 j.) 
Bast is often represented both sitting and standing, with the cat or 
lion's head, disk and nraes holding the amulet of life the a7ix. She 
is sometimes found holding in her right hand a sistrum, carr3dng 
on her left arm a basket, and holding in her left hand an aegis. 
She is always represented as a woman, and very often a prayer 
accompanies the figure, one of which is, " May she grant all life, and 
power, all health and joy of heart," or " I am Bast, the Lady of Life." 

The panegyrics^ or festivals, that were held by the people at the 
various temples of Egj^pt, sank into comparative insignificance compared 
with the festivities which took place in Bubastis, whose magnificent 
temple was the favorite resort of men, women and children. 
These came from every Nome in Eg3'pt, to participate in the sacri- 
fices and licentious festivities indulged in by all who sought Bast. 
The}' would come down the river and canals, by boats, in immense 
numbers, the men beating drums and playing on pipes, and the women 
beating cymbals in time with the music, while those who had no instru- 
ments, would accompany the harmony, by beating time with their 
hands, shouting, and behaving in a very indecent manner, much after 
the stj'le of the v/omen who participate in the festival of Ceres at 
Eleusis. On arriving at Bubastis, they would offer sacrifices and form 
processions, being led by men who played the pipe, the rest would fol- 
low and perform most indecent acts while dancing, shouting and making 
all kinds of gestures in a very debauched condition and in drunken 
abandonment. The number annuall}' assembling here to participate in 
the panegyrics of Bast, has been estimated at seven hundred thousand 
men and women, not including children. 

The first king of the twentj^-second dynasty, Sesonchis, or She- 
shonk, was contemporary Avith Solomon, King of Israel. The scripture 
name of this Egyptian king was Shishak. During the latter part of 
the reign of Solomon he tried to kill Jeroboam, who in order to save his 
life, fled into Egypt, and no doubt to the city of Bubastis, taking refuge 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 45 

with Shishak. On his return he introduced some of the Egyptian 
divinities to the people of Israel. Afterwards Shishak invaded and 
captured the fenced cities of Judah and Benjamin, and took posses- 
sion of Jerusalem, after which he carried away with him into Egypt 
the vast treasures that Solomon had collected. \_See 2nd Kings, 
Chap. 13']. 

The historic names found upon monuments and sculptures of 
Bubastis, range from Khufu of the fourth dynasty to Ptolemy Euergetus 
second. There are also to be found among the ruins the name of 
Rameses second, Osorkon first, Amyrtaeus and others. The ruins of 
this magnificent city lie scattered around in bewildering confusion. 
There is, no doubt, many beautiful statues, lotus, palm-leaf, and Hathor- 
head capitals, shrouded in the drifting sands, which may never be 
brought to the light of day to testify to their wondrous skill and 
knowledge in the art of carving. One very important discovery was 
made in the ruins of this once famous city, and that was a fallen pylon 
of the time of Osorkon second. The carving upon it furnishes a 
description of a very important festival, which is of great interest to 
scholars of the present day, as it explains everything pertaining to it 
in all its details. 

The temples of Lower Egypt differ considerably from those of 
Upper Egypt. In those above Cairo, or the Delta of the Nile, the walls 
are built of sandstone and the columns are made of difi"erent pieces, 
while granite is confined to the pylons, monuments, statues, etc. In the 
Delta the temples were built principally of granite, the vestibules, 
etc., having columns of a single stone of the same material. From 
the Hypostyle hall of this celebrated, magnificent red granite temple 
of Bubastis, came three valuable specimens of ancient Egyptian work- 
manship, now in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, consisting of a 
Hathor-headed capital, a Lotus-bud capital, and a tablet on which 
Amen-Ra is represented enthroned on a dais that is reached by a 
series of steps, towards which a procession is apparently going for 
the purpose of rendering homage to the Great God of Egypt, the son 
of Ptah. The Egyptians affirmed of him, that he was One, the Only 
One. He formed the Jirs^ in the great Triad of Thebes — Amen, Mut 
and Chansu. 



46 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

The ruins of Bubastis are composed of large dark mounds of 
debris, plainly visible from the railroad. There is little to be seen 
here that will interest the traveler of to-day, except the mutilated 
remains of this once magnificent city, unless he is desirous of identify- 
ing the shattered remains with the descriptions by Herodotus, Rawlinson 
and others ; if so, he will be enabled to verify the statements made 
by these authorities respecting its site, surroundings, and magnitude. 
One thing is certain, he will see the great height of the mounds and 
the enormous blocks of beautiful red granite that Herodotus admired 
so much in the temple itself, and will also be enabled to recognize the 
site of both the temple of Bast and Mercury. Herodotus states in Book 
2, Chaps. 66 and 67, that " If a cat dies 'in a private house by a natural 
death, all the inmates of the house shave their eyebrows ; and on the 
death of a dog they shave the head and the whole of the body." Cats 
dying in any part of Egypt, were taken to the ancient city of 
Bubastis in order to be embalmed, after which they were deposited 
in a special place made for the purpose, but all dogs were buried in 
the various towns to which they belonged, and in certain receptacles 
provided for the burial of their bodies. 



Ancient €itics-©siriait fH3)tlj-1liarma» 



tr 



"Co thine abode, to thine abode, Oh come, 

Co thine abode, god Hn, I thee implore, 
Chine enemies exist not any more; 
Return, oh glorious sovereign, to thine home. 

"I am thy sister, rehom thou hast embraced, 
Looh on me, X, thy sister, loving thee; 
Oh, beauteous youth, stay thou not far from mc. 
But come to thine abode with haste, with haste. 

"X see thee not, and to my heart doth throng 

Hnguish for thee, and bitterness untold; 

Mine eyes seek to thee, wishing to behold 
ere X behold will it be long? 

"Bow long, oh glorious sovereign, must I yearn. 

Before the sight of thee mine eyes shall bless? 
God Hn, beholding thee is happiness, 
Co her who loveth thee, return, return. 

<'Oh, On-nefer, the justified in state. 

Come to thy sister, come unto thy wife, 
Oh, Qrt-het! Lo, one mother gave us life, 
Chysclf from me no longer separate. 

"Che gods and men towards thee turn their faces, 
Sleeping for thee when they behold my tears. 
X make lament, but there is none that bears, 
■^ea, though with plaint, unto the heavenly places, 
I, who so loved thee here on earth, do cry, 
Chy sister, none hath loved thee more than X" 

— Quoted from the Hymns of Ancient Egypt (Rawusley). 



48 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 49 



CHAPTER III. 

ANCIENT CITIES— OSIRIAN MYTH— KARMA. 

(g^V'FTER viewing tlie remains of the most extraordinary and wonder- 
t^K ful cities mentioned in the preceding chapter, we must certainly 

^— ^ realize the absurdity of giving credit to the stories that claim 
for certain men the honor of being the inventors and promoters of the 
early sciences, for instance : — It has been claimed by many that Archi- 
medes, who was born in Syracuse, on the island of Sicily, in the year 
B.C. 237. conceived the application of the lever and screw. Why, there is 
not one of these buildings that I have mentioned, in which the lever, 
screw, and wedge were not practically applied by our ancient brethren, 
long centuries before the dawn of authenticated history, to move the 
immense blocks of granite and sandstone used in the construction of 
the stupendous tombs, temples and monuments which adorned the 
whole length and breadth of the land of Egypt. 

Go back to the Pyramids of Egypt, standing to-day in the plains of 
Gizeh, and we can realize that every one of them must have been known 
at that time, and were most assuredly used by our ancient craftsmen, who 
wrought in the quarries of the Mokattum hills, Libyan mountains, and 
elsewhere, and practically applied them in their work, not only of quarry- 
ing, but in the building of those wonderful fabrics. We have ocular 
demonstrations that the science of mathematics was thoroughly compre- 
hended by the practical operative Masons long centuries before Abraham 
saw the stars glitter in the plains of Shinar. If we go to-day into the 
quarries of Syene we shall be enabled to see, not only their methods of 
quarrying, but the holes that were drilled for the wedges, and actually see 
the wedges, as they were placed by the craftsmen before Christ. 

It has also been claimed by many that Galileo, an Italian mathe- 
matician and philosopher, who was born at Pisa, a.d. 1504, invented the 
telescope with a lead pipe and two lenses. Why, the ancient inhabitants 
4 



5b EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

of Central America understood the method oi focusing lenses in tubes, 
for one of their most ancient carvings represents a man looking through 
a telescope, thus demonstrating their knowledge in the use of them. 
Jensen is credited with having invented the compound microscope in the 
year A. D. 1590. We can prove that it was only a re-discovery of what 
had existed long before Christ was born. Cicero, who was born at 
Arpimifu, E. c. 106, declares that he saw the whole of Ho7ne7-''s Iliad 
written on a skin, which might be rolled up and placed inside a walnut 
shell ! Mr. Layard in his explorations discovered a rough magnifying 
lens in the palace oj Nimrod that was made of rock crystal, and he also 
says, in writing of his discoveries in Nineveh, the " engravings on some 
of the stones were so small that they could only be read by the aid of 
very powerful glasses." Does this not show that the microscope must 
have been known at that period, otherwise how could the poem have been 
written or the stones carved ? Aristophanes states that " Burning 
Spheres " were sold in the stores at Athens in his day, B. c. 400. 

In the latter part of the wonderful nineteenth century we had 
arrived at a knowledge of nianufacturing colored glass, and to-day in this 
twentieth century we have improved considerably in this art of making 
beautiful glass, for the purpose of decorating the windows of our cathe- 
drals, churches and palatial residences, as well as for the various utensils 
for household purposes, as well as in imitation of precious stones. This 
art is claimed as a modern invention ! In unearthing the celebrated city 
of Pompeii, destroyed on the twenty-fourth day of August, in the year 
A. D. 79, the workmen discovered a glass factory in which there was an 
immense quantity of glass, including magnificent specimens of gem imi- 
tations, capable of deceiving a dealer himself, if he were not very careful 
in his examinations. In the eleventh century the Arabians knew the 
secret of maniifacturing malleable glass, and so perfect was their know- 
ledge that the}' could anneal and draw it out into threads for weaving. 
During the reign of Tiberius malleable glass was known and glass cups 
were manufactured and used that could be crushed, but not broken. 

The glass blowers of Thebes and Memphis are known to have been 
as proficient in the art of making all kinds of glass as is the most expert 
workman of to-day. The manufacturing of the beautiful opalescent glass 
that they produced could never have been carried on without a knowledge 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 51 

of the metallic oxides by whicli they colored, not only their glass, but 
their pottery as well, and this knowledge most assuredly involves an 
acquaintance with the science of chemistry, which science no doubt 
received its name from the ancient name of the " Land of Egypt," Chemi. 

Rosseleni gives us an illustration of a piece of colored glass that is 
known to be four thousand years old. The priests of the temples, in both 
Memphis and Thebes, were experts in the art of manufacturing all kinds 
of glass. They thoroughly understood the art of vitrifying all the differ- 
ent colors, and the imitation of precioiis stones they brought to the high- 
est state of perfection. The imitation gems they manufactured for the 
temples of Ptah at Memphis were so natural that, after the lapse of forty 
centuries, those lost in the shrouding desert sands, when found, would 
take an expert to distinguish, the true from the false. 

In the British Museum there is an exquisite piece of stained glass, 
with a very fine engraved emblazonment upon it, of King Thothmes III., 
one of Egypt's celebrated monarchs who lived and reigned thirty-four 
centuries ago. This piece of work itself would prove to us that the 
ancient Egyptians made use of the diamond in cutting and engraving. 
The Hebrew people were very expert in the art of engraving, which they 
no doubt learned from the Egyptians, in the field of Zoan (see Exodus 
28: 11). 

Electricity, the force and power that is revolutionizing the world 
to-day, and contributes so immeasurably to our comfort, in driving our 
cars and carriages, lighting our houses, even carrying our very thoughts 
to the four-corners of the earth, was most certainly known to these 
ancient people and was possibly used for the very same purposes that 
we do to-day. (See Job 38 : 35). It would be simply impossible for any 
man to describe something he had never seen or heard of, therefore, 
Job must have known of the working of the telegraph, otherwise he 
never could have described it. 

Many people call this the age of steel, and look upon it as a dis- 
covery belonging exclusively to the nineteenth century. My dear 
Brothers, did you ever examine the implements cf war belonging to 
ancient India, or the celebrated swords of Damascus ? I assure you, 
my dear Friends and Brothers, steel has been used in every dynasty of 
Pharoanic history. In fact, her temples, tombs, sculptures, obelisks and 



52 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

hieroglyphic inscriptions were carved and written with pens of steel by 
our ancient craftsmen, when the songs of Solomon were not, ere Moses 
was lifted from the flowing waters of the river Nile. 

Colonel Howard Vyse, during his investigations of the P3^ramids, 
in the plains of Gizeh, found a piece of iron or steel in one of the joints 
of the stones that formed the Great Pyramid^ which must certainly have 
been placed there during its construction by one of the workmen. In 
the tomb of Rameses fourth, the implements of war that are painted 
upon the walls are colored blue, to represent steel weapons. It would 
have been impossible for the craftsmen to have quarried the stones with 
which to build their extraordinary monuments, without a knowledge of 
steel, and how to make it. Mr. Layard, during his explorations in 
Nineveh, discovered sixty camel-loads of pickaxes. In the time of 
Saiil there were no persons capable of forging among the Israelites 
(ist Samuel 13 : 15), but during the reign of David they had an abund- 
ance of cunning mechanics who were capable. 

Any person who visits the tombs and temples of Egypt will 
certainly realize that their builders had a thorough knowledge, not only 
of the lever and wedge, but the pick, stone-saw, chisel and the various 
tools needed in quarrying and building such extraordinary edifices. 
One glance at those gigantic Pyramids will thoroughly demonstrate this 
fact to even the most skeptical. 

The art of weaving fine linen and rich cloth is so very old that 
we are unable to trace it to the source from which it emanated, but there 
is one thing certain, the ancient Egj'ptiaiis used linen of remarkable 
gossamer-like tissue. Wilkinson tells us in his " Manners and Cus- 
toms " (Vol. III., 19), of a specimen of linen which " excites admiration at 
the present day, being to the touch comparable to silk, and not inferior 
in texture to the finest cambric. This has five hundred and forty 
threads to the inch in the warp, and one hundred and ten in the woof; 
being considerably finer than the richest cambric ever seen in this or 
any other country." 

Ignatius Donnelly in " Atlantis " (page 365), tells us of the ancient 
Eg3'ptians, that " they had clocks and dials for measuring time. They 
possessed gold and silver money, and were the first agriculturists of 
the Old World, raising cereals, cattle, horses and sheep. They also 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 53 

manufactured linen of so fine a quality that in the days of King Amasis 
(600 years B. c), a single thread of a garment was composed of three 
hundred and sixty-five minor threads ; worked in gold and silver, copper, 
bronze, and iron, and tempered iron to the hardness of steel. They were 
the first chemists. The word 'chemistry' comes from cJiemi^ and chenii 
means Egypt. They manufactured glass and all kinds of pottery ; 
made boats out of earthenware ; and precisely as we do now, made 
railroad car-wheels of paper; and also manufactured vessels of paper. 
Their dentists filled teeth with gold, and their farmers hatched poultry 
with artificial heat. They were the first musicians, possessing guitars, 
single and double pipes, cymbals, drums, lyres, harps, flutes, the sambric 
and ashur. They had even castanets, such as are now used in Spain. 

" In medicine and surgery they had reached such a degree of per- 
fection that several years B. C. the operation for cataract upon the ej^e 
was performed among them, one of the most delicate and difficult feats 
of surgery, only attempted by us in the most recent times. 

'' ' The Papyrus of Berlin ' was discovered, rolled up in a case, 
under the feet of Anubis, in the town of Sekhem, in the days of Tet 
(or Thoth), after whose death it was transmitted to King Sent, and was 
then restored to the feet of the statue. King Sent belonged to the 
second dynasty, which flourished B. c. 4751, and the papyrus was old in 
his day. This papyrus is a medical treatise, containing no incantations 
or charms, but dealing in reasonable remedies, draughts, ungeuts and 
injections. The later medical papyri contain a great deal of magic and 
incantations. 

" Egypt was the magnificent, the golden bridge, ten thousand years 
long, glorious with temples and pyramids, illuminated and illustrated 
\)y the most complete and continuous records of human histor}^, along 
which the civilization of ' Atlantis,' in a great procession of kings and 
priests, philosophers and astronomers, artists and artisans streamed for- 
ward to Greece, to Rome, to Europe, to America. As far back in the 
ages as the eye can penetrate, even where the perspective dwindles 
almost to a point, we can still see the swarming multitudes, possessed 
of the arts of the highest civilization, passing forward from out 
other and greater empire of which even this wonder-worliia^^ile-land 
is but a faint and imperfect copy." 




54 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Semmenud is the site of the Sebenyte Nome that gave its name 
to the thirtieth dynasty. It was founded by its iirst King, Nec- 
tanebo I, who successfully defended his country against the attacks 
of the Persians and Greek mercenaries, under Pharnabazus and Iphi- 
crates. After Nectanebo defeated these invaders of his country he 
spent the rest of his life in tranquillity and peace. It was during 
the reign of this King that Plato visited Egypt, for the purpose of 
investigating the religions and philosophies of this country, and he, 
like Pythagoras, was initiated into the ancient rites and ceremonies, 
from which our own glorious Scottish Rite has descended, of whose 
esoteric teachings I shall speak later. 

The ancient Egyptian name of Sebennytus was Teb-en-nuter, 
which the cuneiform inscription translates Zabnuter. In this city 
Manetho, the celebrated Egyptian historian, is said to have been 
born. He was a High Priest of the temple of Isis in Sebennytus^ 
the modern Semmenud. Manetho, in ancient Egyptian, was written 
Mai-CH-thot^ which signified " beloved of Thoth." He lived in the reign 
of Ptolemy Lagi and he was noted for his scholarly attainments, 
a man of the highest reputation, who thoroughly understood the 
Greek language, in consequence of which he was requested by Ptol- 
emy II, Philadelphus, to translate the historical records that had been 
preserved in the sacred repositories of the temples of Egypt. He 
was an Egyptian priest, and authorized by Ptolemy himself to give 
to the world a history of his own countr}', Egypf, with which he 
was so thoroughly acquainted. He had access to the archives of all 
the temples throughout the " Land of Egypt," and I claim that 
these facts alone should impress the student with the truth of each 
and every one of his statements, ever remembering that he was a 
man of the highest reputation and ability. This history was held 
in high estimation, but was subsequently lost, and all that remains 
to us of this most valuable and scholarly work to-day, is the, chron- 
ological list of the Kings of the various dynasties, transmitted to us 
through the Jewish and Christian chronographers. 

Mariette Bey states, in his " Monuments of Upper Egypt," that 
" the system of contemporaneous dynasties is as yet supported by 
no really trustworthy proof; on the contrary, it seems certain that 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 55 

Manetho was well aware that, at various epochs, Egypt was goverued 
simultaneously by several dynasties, and he availed himself of the 
means at his disposal to strike out of his work all such dynasties 
as did not belong to the general series of royal houses who suc- 
ceeded each other on the throne, so that the latter were alone offi- 
cially enrolled in due order on the register of Kings." 

The reason Mariette makes this statement is because there are 
many authorities who claim that Manetho cites various dynasties as 
successive that were contemporaneous. If this were truth and the 
fact could be proven, we should have to deduct from the total amount 
the duration of these various dynasties, said to have been falsely 
placed upon the roll belonging to regular consecutive dynasties of 
Egyptian history. The dates taken from Manetho are not in accord- 
ance with extracts culled from Julius Africanus and Eusebius, yet 
the two versions of the Chronicle of Eusebius do not agree with 
each other. Therefore the authority of Manetho, as a chronologist, 
remains unshaken, but on condition that we only take the dates 
which he gives us as approximate. It is certain that those dates are 
not absolutely exact, yet it is difficult to believe that they have been 
so radically altered as not in any degree to come near the truth. 

The nearer we approach the source of those alterations the more 
we shall feel compelled to admit that if the original lists could but 
have reached us intact, from the hand of Manetho himself, we would 
find them extending over a .'.till wider range of time. There is no 
question but that Manetho's figures have suffered serious alterations. 
But if we consider the figures as coming down to us through Christian 
writers, who had an evident purpose in curtailing them, we shall find, 
as a matter of fact, that this is far from ascribing too wide a range to 
them, and are bound, as fair critics, to accept them as having been 
systematically reduced in their total amount. There is no nation which 
ever existed in the world's history whose manners, customs, arts, 
sciences and philosophies are more easily traced than those of the 
ancient Egyptians, because she has not only written her own history, 
and carved it tipon her tombs and temples, but she has given us 
keys by which we are enabled to decipher the hieroglyphic inscrip- 
tions and phonetic characters in the various stele, such as the Rosetta 



56 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Stone, the famous trilingual stone that was discovered by Dr. Lep- 
sius, the stele found b}^ Mariette Bey in the temple of Seti, and the 
many papyrus rolls that have been discovered at various times and 
places, despite the tooth of time and war's bloody hand, passing 
unscathed through the ravages of long drifting ages. These evidences 
of her civilization and intellectual advancement, with the treasures 
found in her buried cities, as well as those found under the drifting 
sands of the desert, in the Nomes of a prehistoric age, confirm what 
Manetho has written of his country. 

I need not mention every or any special place from which we 
have obtained fragmentar}' records, but simply state that every tomb, 
temple, monument, mummy-case and contents have given us historical 
and genealogical records which not only confirm, but supplement what 
was written by our ancient Brother Manetho, whose name had been 
indorsed by the tongue of good rcporf^ who had been proven worthy 
and well qualified, " a man of the highest reputation," an Archamagus 
of the ancient Egyptian mysteries, whose name, like that of our 
revered Brother, the late General Albert Pike, Hierophaut of the nine- 
teenth century, will never die, but, like his works, writings and 
integrity, -will stand the most crucial test and come forth from the 
trial and investigation, an honor to the ancient mysteries and its lineal 
descendant, our beloved Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Free 
Masonry. 

Senimenund or Scmvieiind^ is a tj-pical Egyptian town of about 
eleven thousand inhabitants. It is noted for its celebrated pottery, 
which is manufactured there and sent to all the larger cities, where 
it finds a ready sale throughout the whole of Egypt. It has the 
usual bazaars and mud hovels and all the peculiar concomitants 
that go to make up the peculiarities of typical Egyptian towns. 
Nectanebo XI was the last of the Sebennyte sovereigns, and was 
also the last of those native Egyptian Kings who ruled Egypt from 

B. C. 5004 to B. C. 340. 

To the north of Semmenud, and south of Mansura lies the 
ancient city of Iseuni, in the Sebennyte Nome. It is now called 
Behbii-cl-Hagar^ while the ancient Egj^ptians knew it as Hcbt or Pa- 
Hebt. It was called the " town of the Panegyrics," from the Egyp- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 57 

tian name of Pa-Hebt. It is also called the " city of the stoue," 
which derives its Arab name, Behbit-el-Hagar, on account of the very 
large number of stones to be seen there, once going to form a part of 
the beautiful decorations of this magnificent city, now scattered around 
in promiscuous confusion. The ruins of this celebrated citj' are very 
much inferior to the cit}' in " the field of Zoan," as well as that of 
Eubastis, but notwithstanding this fact, it will well repay the trav- 
eller, or student of ancient Egyptian histor}^, for the time spent in 
visiting these celebrated ruins, and in viewing the fragmentary remains 
of those beautiful carvings, executed in the peculiar colored granite, 
used to adorn and beautify this once famous cit}- of the Ptolemies. 

The traveller will most assuredl}^ have unmistakable proofs of the 
deit}' that was worshipped here, in the numerous sculptures and carvings 
of an animal sacred to the goddess Isis, the cozv^ and also the exceedingly 
large number of figures with cow-heads. From this alone we judge 
that Isis was the principal deity worshipped there, as doubtless both the 
Greeks and Romans called this city Iseiim or Ision. The chief deities 
that were worshipped in this city were the Osirian Triad — Isis^ Osiriis 
and Horns. Osiris was a form of the sun god, Ra^ and the child 
of Seby the earth, and Niif^ the heavens, in Egj'ptian mytholog}', who 
was the presiding judge in Amenti. His wife Isis represented the dawn^ 
and their son was Horns, the sun, in his full power and glorj-. On a 
figure of the goddess found here was carved the following : " Isis, Mis- 
tress of Hebt." 

There is another very interesting piece of work carved on a slab 
of grey granite, streaked with red, on which there is a representation 
of the king offering a gift of land to Osiris and Isis — " The great 
divine mistress of Hebit." The name of Ptolemy II., Philadelphus I., 
occurs in various parts of this tem.ple, who founded it , B. c. 284-2/16. 
His name appears in the dedications, while he presents the various 
offerings to the various gods. The temple alone must have cost an 
immense sum, as- it was built of a very fine peculiar grej^ and red 
granite, now lying scattered around, broken and mutilated. There 
are among them fragments of architraves, slabs, columns, and blocks of 
all shapes and kinds of stone, some square, others circular-shaped, and 
many with very fine carvings upon them, both in intaglio and in relief. 



58 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

Some of these have very large hieroglyphic inscriptions carved upon 
them, while others are comparatively small, but excellently well executed. 

There is one peculiar feature about the ruins of this temple, and 
that is, a different kind of granite has been used in its construction 
from that which composed the temples of Upper Egypt. It seems as 
if au especial effort had been made to exclude every kind of stone from 
this building that was used in the construction of the other temples 
outside the Delta. It is too bad that this building should have been 
so completely demolished, because we are unable to trace, with any 
degree of exactitude, the plan of the temple. Its destrviction is no doubt 
due to the natives undermining the building in order to procure the 
limestone, to burn and sell. 

Murray describes one of the walls of this temple as follows : " On 
one of the walls about the centre of the temple is represented the sacred 
boat, or ark, of Isis, and in the shrine it bears the ' Lad}^ of Pa-Hebt,' 
seated between two figures of goddesses, like the Jewish cherubim, who 
seem to protect her with their wings. They occur in two compartments, 
one over the other, at the centre of the shrine. These figures were, 
doubtless, the holy and unseen contents of the sacred repository which 
no profane eye was permitted to behold, being generall}' covered with a 
veil. In the upper one Isis is seated on a lotus flower and the two 
figures standing, while in the other all three are seated and below are 
four kneeling figures, one with a man's the other three with jackal's 
heads, beating their breasts. At either end of the boat is the head of 
the goddess, and the legend above shows it to have belonged to her. 
The king stands before it, presenting an offering of incense to Isis. 

" There appears to be a very great variety in the sculptures, which 
mostly represent offerings to Isis, and the contemplar dieties, as in other 
Ptolemaic buildings. In one place the hawk-headed Hor-Hat conducts 
the king into the presence of the goddess of the temple ; but the battle 
scenes and grand religious processions of old times are wanting here, as 
in other temples of a Ptolemaic and Roman epoch, and though the 
sculptures are rich, being highly finished, they are deficient in the 
elegance of a Pharaonic age — the fault of all Greco-Egyptian sculptures, 
and one which strikes every eye accustomed to monuments erected before 
the decadence of art in Egypt." 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 59 

This temple, to-day, is in a demolished condition, with debris of all 
kinds piled and scattered promiscuously around, and all kinds of stone 
lying one upon another, in the wildest confusion. Notwithstanding this 
fact it is possible for one to go down beneath the masses of rubbish and 
stones, ten or a dozen feet, through various openings between the larger 
stones, where could be seen shattered parts of architraves, cornices, and 
large granite columns, crowned with the head of Isis, very fine specimens 
of the Ptolemaic age, but more especially of the granite carvings in relief, 
which must have taken an immense amount of time, labor and patience. 
One thing that was plainly to be seen, was parts of the ceiling, with the 
usual five pointed star upon a blue ground, just such stars as are to be 
found upon the ceilings of our own beloved Scottish Rite cathedrals 
to-day. 

Herodotus says Btisiris was situated in the very middle of the Delta, 
which was the next cit}' in importance to Bubastis, for the splendors of 
its ceremonies during the festival of Isis (Book II, Chapter 59.) Diodorus 
informs us that there were two places called Biisiris in Egypt. Biisiris 
signifies " tJie burial place of Osiris.'''' 

Wilkinson says, in note 6, chapter 61, of Herodotus, "The city of 
his was lower down the river, and it is more probable that the fete of Isis 
was held there than at Busiris." It is now called Bebayt and its site is 
marked by the ruin of a granite temple, the only one, except that at 
Bubastis., entirely built of that beautiful and costly material. It was 
doubtless thought worthy to succeed the very large temple that was dedi- 
cated to Isis, of which Herodotus speaks, for it was built during the reign 
of the Ptolamies and it was formerly called Iseum., and by the ancient 
Egyptians Hebai, or Hebait., of which Isis is named in the sculptures 
" The Mistress of HebtJ' Hebai signifies a '^ panegyry'f or assembly, 
and this was the real meaning of the name of the place. Osiris 
is also sometimes spoken of in the legends as " Lord oj the laiid of 
Hebai r 

Now this shows that it was not the city of Busiris that was second 
in importance in Egypt for the magnificence of its ceremonies, during 
the festival in honor of the goddess Isis, according to Herodotus, but 
Behbit-el-Hagar., or Pa-Hebt — " the city of the stone^'' or the town of the 
panegyries, the city I have just described to you. 



60 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

I stated previously that Osiris was one of the principal deities 
worshipped in this city, in fact he was worshipped throughout the 
whole of Egypt, Ethiopia, Greece and Rome. No doubt the worship of 
this God was also introduced among the tribes of the children of Israel by 
Jeroboam on his return to his own country Osiris is always represented 
\\ith a human head sitting on a throne, as a king or judge in the Halls of 
Amenti^ or in the form of a mummy ; but in either case he always carries 
the scourge and crook, wearing upon his head the crown of Upper 
Egypt, which is very often decorated with the plumes of Truth, while 
beside him stands the Thyrsus^ the vine and ivy twined staff of the 
Bacchantes, enwrapped with a leopard's skin. He was the judge of the 
Amenti or Lord of the Underworld, the King of Eternity. Of all the 
gods of Egypt he is the only one who has a regular, detailed, mythical 
history, like the gods of Grecian mythology. Herodotus says that Osiris 
was considered to be the Bacchus of the Greeks, and Diodorus states that 
Osiris " has been considered the same as Serapis, Bacchus, Pluto, or 
Amon. Others have thought him Jupiter, many Pan." 

The ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic inscriptions identify Apis, the 
sacred bull, worshipped at Memphis during the second dynasty with 
Osiris, claiming that he was the god Osiris reincarnated in the shape 
of a bull. The mythical legend of this celebrated god is related by 
Plutarch as follows : " Rhea, having secretly united herself with Saturn, 
the Sun, becoming indignant, laid upon her a curse, that she should not 
bring forth in any year or month. Mercury, however, who was also a 
lover of Rhea, playing at dice with the Moon, took away the seventeenth 
part of each period of daylight, and from these made five new days 
which are the epagomenai or intercalary days (seventy here stands, as 
elsewhere, a round number instead of the precise one, for seventy-two; 
five being the seventy-second part of three hundred and sixty). On 
each of these five days Rhea bore a child. On the first day Osiris, the 
son of the Sun, was born, at whose birth a voice was heard proclaiming' 
that the Lord of all was coming to Light ; or, according to another ver- 
sion, Paamyles, drawing water in the temple of Jupiter, heard a voice, 
which enjoined upon him to proclaim that the great and beneficient 
King Osiris was born. This Paamyles received him to nurse, and 
hence the festival of the Paamylia, which was a phallephoria. On the 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 61 

second day was born Aroen's, son of the Sun, whom they call Apollo, 
and the Elder Horus. On the third was born Typlion, not in the usual 
course, but bursting out with a sudden stroke from the side of Rhea. 
On the fourth day was born Isis, the daughter of Hermes. On the 
fifth Nepkthys, who was called Teleute (the end), and Aphrodite, and 
according to some, Nike. Typhon and Nephthys were the children 
of Sati:rn and married each other. In consequence of the birth of 
Typhon, the third day of the epagomenai was a dies iicfashis, and the 
Kings of Egypt neither transacted public business nor took the usual 
care of their persons till night. Isis and Osiris ^rmited themselves 
even before their birth and their son was called, according to some, 
x\roeris, or the Elder Horus. The more common account, however, 
made the son of Osiris and Isis to be the younger Horus.'' 

Osiris being king, instructed the Egyptians in the arts of civili- 
zation, taught them agriculture, enacted laws for them, and estab- 
lished the worship of the gods. He afterwards traversed the world 
for the same purpose, subduing the nations, not by arms, but by per- 
suasion, and especially by the charms of music and poetry, which gave 
the Greeks occasion to identify him with Dionusos. In his absence 
Isis administered the regency so wisely that Typhon was unable to 
create any disturbance ; but on his return he conspired against Osiris 
with seventy-two men and the Ethiopian queen, Aso, who having 
secretly obtained the measure of Osiris, caused a coffin, splendidly 
adorned, to be brought into the banqueting hall, promising to give it to 
the guest whom it should fit. Osiris put himself into it to make trial, 
and Typhon and his associates immediatel}^ pegged and soldered down 
the case and set it afloat on the river. It floated to the Tanitic mouth, 
which, on that account, the Eg3'ptians held accursed. These things 
were done on the seventeenth of the month Athyr, in which the Sun 
enters Scorpion, and in the twenty-eight year of the reigri, or as some 
said, of the age of Osiris. The Pans and Satyrs, who lived about 
Chemmis, hearing of these events and being agitated hy them into 
sudden terrors, obtained the name of Panics. Isis cut off her hair and 
put on mourning at the place where she first heard the news ; whence 
it obtained the name Coptos, signifying " to mourn for the dead." 
Meeting some boys, she heard from them where the coflin had floated, 



62 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

and hence the Egyptians deemed the words of boys to carry with them 
a divine meaning. Osiris had, by mistake, united himself with Nephthys, 
and a son had been born to him, whom Nephthys hid immediately 
from his birth. Isis sought him out and found him by the guidance 
of a dog, who attended her thenceforth, and was called Anubis. 

" Meanwhile the chest had been floated to Byblos^ and cast ashore ; 
the plant erica {a narrow leafed evergreen sliriib) , had grown up about it 
and enclosed it, and in this state it had been made use of as a pillar 
to support the palace of the king. Isis arrived, divinely conducted, in 
search of it, and recommending herself to the queen's maidens, had 
the charge of the young prince committed to her. She then obtained 
possession of the chest, and opening it, carried it to Buto, where Horus 
was being brought up. The event of her return was celebrated by sacri- 
fices on the seventeenth da}' of the month Tybi^ and the figure of a hip- 
popotamus bound, was impressed upon the sacrificial cakes, as an emblem 
of the defeat of Typhon. Here she deposited the body in secrecy, but 
Typhon, hunting by moonlight, found it and cut it into fourteen pieces. 
Isis in a baris made of papyrus, traversed the marshes and when she 
found one of the members, buried it there, whence the number of reputed 
places of interment of Osiris. In the end she found all the members 
but one, which had been devoured by the 'a.'?,\\&s phagrus and lepidotus. 

" Isis, therefore, made an emblem of it, whence the honors still paid 
to it b}^ the Egyptians (probably though Plutarch does not expresslj'- 
say so, Isis was conceived to have reconiposed the body from the limbs 
thus recovered). Osiris returned from Hades and gave his aid to Horus, 
who was preparing to overthrow the power of Typhon. Typhon fell 
into the hands of Isis, but she released him, at which Horus was so 
enraged that he plucked his mother's diadem from her head and Mercury 
supplied its place by a helmet in the form of cow's head. Two other 
battles took place before Typhon was finally subdued. Harpocrates 
was born from the union of Isis and Osiris, after the death of Osiris, 
and was consequently imperfect with a weakness in his lo^wer limbs." 
Such is the myth as related by Plutarch and by Kenrick in " Ancient 
Egypt." 

Baedeker's Lower Egypt tells us that Osiris was not actually killed 
by Typhon. He simply went to the underworld and there continued his 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 63 

existence. It was lie who trained and armed his son Horns to do battle 
against Typhon, in which he eventual!}' became victorious by defeating 
Typhon, but not in totally destroying him. With the assistance of 
Osiris they banished him to the infernal regions. Osiris is also regarded 
as the moisture falling upon the earth, the most perfect representation 
of which is the inundation of the river Nile. While Tj^phon and his 
seventy-two companions (the intercalary days), which represented the 
days of drought that dominated the earth, during which time Isis 
becomes sorrowful, longing, hoping for the return of Osiris, she mourns 
his absence, until eventuall}' he returns, when Typhon is defeated and 
the fertile earth (Tsis) is again dominated bj' the flooding waters of the 
river Nile (Osiris) when an abundance is assured. 

Osiris is regarded as the principal of Life. Isis, the Earth, is the 
scene of the operation of that principal, while Typon represents death, 
and Horns the resurrection. If we regard Osiris, as the monuments so 
frequently do, as a pure and perfect being, the principle of the good, and 
the beautiful, in which case he receives the surname of Un-Nefer, we 
recognize in Typhon the discords with which life is so replete, but which 
seem to be permitted onl}^ in order that the purity of the harmonies into 
which they are resolved, through the intervention of Horns, may be the 
more thoroughl}^ appreciated. 

Osiris, according to the exoteric doctrine, is also the sovereign of the 
lower regions and judge of souls, which, if found pure, are permitted to 
unite with his. The dead, therefore, do not merely go to Osiris, but 
actually become Osiris. 

" Osiris^^ according to Wilkinson, " was ranked or belonged to the 
third order of gods, and had the honor of being the god whose mysteries 
contained the most important secrets ; his rites comprised the chief part 
of the Egyptian wisdom ; he was the chief of Ametiti or Hades and 
was a Jieaveiily as well as an infernal deit3^ There was also an important 
reason for his being of the last or newest order of gods, related particu- 
larly to man, the last and most perfect work of the creation, and as the 
Deity was at first the Monad, then the Creator, ' creation being God 
passing into activity,' he did not become Osiris until man was placed 
upon the earth. He there manifested himself also, like Buddha for the 
benefit of man, who looked upon him for happiness in a future state." 



64 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

In all the representation of the judgment of the dead Osiris is 
always represented " seated upon a throne, surrounded by certain gods 
and goddesses, paraphernalia, etc., holding within his hands the scourge 
and crook, and generally with his arms crossed upon his breast, while 
close beside him stands the thyrsus entwined with a spotted leapord's 
skin. He is generally attended by Isis and Nephthys, and in some pic- 
tures we see the four gods of the underworld. The centre of the paintings 
is generally occupied by a representation of a very large pair of scales and 
beam, standing beside which we recognize Thoth with a book or papyrus 
roll in his hand, noting the result of the process of weighing. In one 
scale the heart of the deceased is placed against the feather of Truth. 
One side of the scale is attended by the goddess of Truth, who places 
the feather against the heart of the deceased which has been placed there, 
within the opposite one by Horns. Then when the weighing has been 
finished Horus takes the tablet from Thoth, wherein has been recorded 
the decision which he announces to Osiris, the record of the good and 
moral qualities of the deceased against the feather of Truth and Justice. 
Then if the virtues of the deceased preponderate in his favor, Thoth 
introduces him into the presence of Osiris, but if the virtuous qualities 
of the ca-ndidate has been weighed and found wanting, Osiris rejects him 
and he is condemned and punished according to the judgment that has 
been rendered to the Lord of Amenti — Osiris. 

The pictorial representations of this judgment scene differs in 
different places, some of them represent the forty-two assessors, corres- 
ponding to the earthh' judges, who determined whether the deceased 
should be allowed to cross the river and enter into the abode of eternal 
bliss, or dwell on the confines of Hades and die a second death. Every 
Egyptian thoroughly believed that after death he would have to pass into 
the halls of Amenti in ordei ^o be weighed in the balance and judged 
according to his y//o>-/' cfo^'5. ^o matter what his station in life might be, 
he would have to undergo the ordeal of being weighed, and abide by the 
judgment rendered. In the same way, directly after death, his earthly 
judges rendered judgment for or against him. If he was found 
guilty, or unworthy, he would be excluded from burial in his own tomb 
or sepulchre, and during his trial all who knew him were allowed to 
testify for or against him, and according to the evidence he was judged. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 65 

This earthly judgment was typical of the one in the halls of Amenti. It 
was from this peculiar ancient custom that it was introduced into the 
ancient Mysteries, and during the peculiar rites and ceremonies the 
candidate died symbolically before he was raised to Light and Life. In 
the halls of Amenti, Osiris may be said rather to have presided over the 
dead than to have judged them. He gave admission to those who were 
found worthy to enter into the abode of happiness in the halls of peace. 
He was not the avenging deity ; he did not punish, nor could he show 
mercy or subvert the judgment pronounced. It was a simple question of 
whether the deceased was guilt}' or not. If wicked, they were destined 
to suffer punishment according to their deeds. A man's actions were 
balanced in the scales against Justice and Truth ; then, if they were 
found wanting, he would be excluded from all future happiness. Thus, 
though the Egyptians are said to have believed that the gods were 
capable of influencing destin}' {EsTibeis, Pr., £z'., iii--f), it is evident 
Osiris [like the Greek Zeus) was bound by it, and the wicked were 
punished, not because he rejected them, "but because they were wicked." 

I have given a very lengthy account of the mythical story of Osiris, 
for the reason that it formed not only the basis of the Ancient Eg3'ptian 
Mysteries, but also represented the scenes enacted in the great drama of 
life, if properl}^ understood ; and the teachings that emanated from the 
Ancient Egyptian Mysteries are to be ff^ id in every religion and every 
philosophy throughout the Avorld, in ever}- age and everj' epoch of its 
history. They have always been, and are now, covered with such a mass 
of rubbish that it is difficult to discover the glorious Truths that 
underlie their philosophy. 

Now let us examine the Osirian myth, and take Osiris as the Judge 
or presiding deity of Amenti, and we shall find that the teachings of our 
Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite inform us that he was not a god of 
vengeance, but a god of Truth and Justice. He judged no man, but 
simply pronounced the sentence that had been adjudged by Thoth, the 
Divine Nature, or " The Lord of Karma," after they had been weighed in 
the balance and their sentence declared to Osiris, who then and there 
pronounced it. Each and every man's "higher self" recognized that 
perfect Justice had been meted out to him. He knew that the acts of his 
life, in thought, word or deed, were to be harvested in their effects. It 
5 



66 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

was simply impossible for Osiris in any way to interfere with the Law of 
Cause and Effect ; or, in other words, any man's " Karmay When a 
man's life actions are weighed in the balance, his dues are rendered to 
him with perfect justice. He has made his own record and he will reap 
the full effects of it, be it good or evil, and this fact alone shows that 
" Man is the master of his own destiny.'''' What he has sown that must 
he also reap, and there is no power in earth or in heaven that can alter 
his Karma. Sir Edwin Arnold beautifully illustrates this in " The 
Light of Asia." 

" Karma — All that total of a soul 
Which is the things it did, thoughts it had, 
The ' self ' it wove with woof of viewless time 
Crossed on the ways of invisible acts." 

A sin committed, or an evil thought permitted to go forth from 
your mind, for evil, is just the same as if the act itself had been per- 
formed. They are then beyond recall. You have sown the seed, and 
YOU, yourself^ must suffer the consequence, and not somebody else, as 
nothing _y^// or any one else can do can ever destroy the result of your act or 
thought. Repentance may possibly have a tendency to prevent one from 
repeating errors, but it never will, nor ever can destroy the effect of 
those already done. My dear Brothers, I do most earnestly and sin- 
cerely believe this, and most earnestly ask you, my dear readers and 
Friends, to take this matter under your careful consideration, and along 
these lines of thought I will quote you from " Re-incarnation," by E- D. 
Walker, page 302 : 

" The relentless hand which metes out our fortunes with the stern 
justice most vividly portrayed by the Greek dramatists in their Nemesis, 
Fates and Furies, takes from our own savings the gifts bestowed on us. 
' Alas, we sow what we reap ; the hand that smites us is our own.' In 
the domain of eternal justice the offense and the punishment are insep- 
erably connected as the same event, because there is no real distinction 
between the action and its outcome. He who injures another in fact 
only wrongs himself To adopt Schopenhauer's figure, he is a wild 
beast who fastens his fangs in his own flesh. But linked with the awful 
fact of our own individual responsibilit}^ for what we now are, gives the 
inspiring assurance, that we have under our control the remedy of evil 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 67 

and the increase of good. We can, and we alone can, extricate ourselves 
from the existing limitations, by the all-curing powers of purity, love, and 
spirituality. In Eastern phraseology, the purpose of life is to work out 
our bad Karma (action) and to stow away good Karma. As surely as the 
harvest of to-day grows from the seed-time of yesterday, so shall every 
kernel of thought and feeling, speech and performance bring its crop of 
reward or rebuke. The inherent result of every quiver of the human 
WILL continually tolls the Day of Judgment and affords immeasurable 
opportunities for amelioration." 

This is just exactly what the philosophical degrees of our own 
beloved Scottish Rite teach us, and Brother Albert Pike says in 
"Morals and Dogmas" (pages 216-17): "We shall be just as happy- 
hereafter, as we are pure and upright, and no more, just as happy as our 
character prepares us to be, and no more. Our moral, like our mental 
character, is not formed in a moment, it is the habit of our minds, the 
result of. many thoughts and feelings and efforts bound together by 
many natural and strong ties. The great law of retribution is, that all 
coming experience is to be aifected by every present feeling, every 
future moment of being must answer for every present moment. One 
moment sacrificed to vice, or lost to improvement, is forever sacrificed 
and lost ; an hour's delay to enter the right path, is to put us back so far 
in the everlasting pursuit of happiness, and every sin, even of the best 
men, is to be thus answered for, if uot according to the full measure 
of its ill desert, yet according to a rule of unbending rectitude and 
impartiality. 

" The law of retribution presses upon every man, whether he thinks 
it or not. It pursues him through all the courses of life, with a step 
that never falters nor tires, and with an eye that never sleeps nor 
slumbers. If it were not so, God's government would not be impartial ; 
there would be no discrimination ; no moral dominion, no light shed 
on the mysteries of Providence. 

" Whatsoever a man soweth, that, and not something else, shall he 
reap. That which we are doing, good or evil, grave or gay, that which 
we do to-day, and shall do to-morrov/, each thought, each feeling, each 
action, each event, every passing hour, every breathing moment, all are 
contributing to form the character, according to which we are to be 



68 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

judged. Every particle of influence that goes to form that aggregate, — 
our character, — will in that future scrutiny, be sifted out from the mass, 
and particle by particle, with ages perhaps intervening, fall a distinct 
contribution to the sum of our joys or woes. Thus every idle w^ord 
and idle hour will give answer in the judgment. 

" Let us take care, therefore, what we sow. An evil temptation 
comes upon us, the opportunity of unrighteous gain or of unhallowed 
indulgence, either in the sphere of business or pleasure, of society 
or solitude. We 3aeld, and plant a seed of bitterness and sorrow. 
To-morrow it will threaten discovery. Agitated and alarmed, we cover 
the sin and bur}? it deep in falsehood and hypocrisy. In the bosom 
where it lies concealed, in the fertile soil of kindred vices, that sin dies 
not, but thrives and grows, and other and still other germs of evil 
gather around the accursed root, until, from that single seed of corruption 
there springs up in the soul all that is horrible in habitual lying, knavery 
or vice. Loathingly, often, we take each downward step; but a frightful 
power urges us onward, and the hell of debt, disease, ignominy, or 
remorse, gathers its shadows around our steps, even on earth, and are 
yet but the beginning of sorrows. The evil deed may be done in a 
single moment ; but conscience never dies, memory never sleeps, guilt 
can never become innocence and remorse can never whisper peace. 

" Beware, thou who art tempted to evil! Beware what thou layest 
up for the future ! Beware what thou layest up in the archives of 
eternity! Wrong not thy neighbor! lest the thought of him thou 
injurest and who suff"ers by thy act be to thee a pang which years will 
not deprive of its bitterness ! Break not into the house of innocence, to 
rifle it of its treasure, lest when many j^ears have passed over thee, the 
moan of its distress may not have died away from thine ear ! Build not 
the desolate throne of ambition in thy heart, nor be busj^ with devices 
and circumventings, and selfish schemings, lest desolation and loneliness 
be on thj' path, as it stretches into the long futurity ! Live not a 
useless, an impious, or an injurious life! for bound up with that life is 
the immutable principle of an endless retribution, and elements of God's 
creating, w^hich will never spend their force, but continue ever to unfold 
with the ages of eternity. Be not deceived ! God has formed thy 
nature, thus to answer to the future. His law can never be abrogated, 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 69 

nor his justice eluded; and for ever and ever it will be true, that 
\ Whatsoever a man soweth, that also he shall reap.'''''' 

Madam H. P. Blavatsky says in " The Key to Theosophy " (page 
237), "If our present lives depend upon the development of certain 
principles which are a growth from the germs left by a previous exist- 
ence, the law holds good as regards the future. Once grasp the idea that 
universal causation is not merely present, but past, present and future, 
and every action on our present plane falls naturally and easily into its 
true place, and is seen in its true relation to ourselves and to others. 
Every mean and selfish action sends us backward and not forward, while 
every noble thought and every unselfish deed are stepping-stones to the 
higher and more glorious planes of being. If this life were all, then in 
many respects it would indeed be poor and mean, but regarded as a pre- 
paration for the next sphere of existence, it may he used as the golden 
gate through which we may pass, not selfishly and alone, but in company 
with our fellows, to the palace which lies beyond." 

Buto, of whom I have previously spoken in this chapter, was 
identified by the Greeks in their Laiona. She was worshipped princi- 
pally in the town of Buto, which received its name from festivals held 
there in her honor, and an oracle was established there which was held 
in high esteem by the ancient Egyptians. " The most veracious of all 
the oracles of all the Egyptians " (Herodotus, Book II, chapter 152.) It 
was to this goddess that Isis entrusted her children while she went in 
search of lost Osiris. Buto acted the part of nurse and guardian to 
Horns and Bubastis, and watched over them very carefully during the 
whole time that Isis was absent, and when Typhon sought to persecute 
and destroy them she carried them away, hiding them in a floating 
island called Chemmis. In this way she prevented Typhon from obtain- 
ing possession of them. This island was situated in a lalyC not very far 
from the town of Buto, upon which Horus and Bubastis, with Buto, were 
worshipped together. 

I have not gone into the profound depths of the esoteric meaning of 
the Osirian Triad in this chapter, but shall leave that subject to another. 
Neither do I wish to enter into a long and useless article in order to 
prove that Scottish Rite Masonry has been in existence from time 
immemorial, but I do most assuredly claim that our most Illustrious 



70 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite teaches the same grand truths, tlie 
same sublime philosophies, and solves the same scientific problems as 
elucidated in the esoteric teachings of the ancient mysteries, and I do 
most firmly and sincerely believe that these esoteric teachings originated 
in the valley of Hindustan, and that it was cradled on the banks of the 
river Nile, in the hoar}' ages of the past, from whence it found its way to 
all parts of the earth. ' . 

Every degree of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite, from the 
first to the thirty-second degree, teaches by its ceremonial as well as by 
its instruction, that the noblest purpose of life and the highest duty of a 
man are to strive incessantly and vigorously to win the mastery in every- 
thing, of that which in him is spiritual and divine, over that which is 
material and sensual ; so that in him also, as in the universe which God 
governs, harmony and beauty may be the result of a just equilibrium. 

To achieve it, the Mason must first attain a solid conviction, founded 
upon reason, that he hath within him a spiritual nature, a soul that is 
not to die when the body is dissolved, but is to continue to exist and to 
advance toward perfection through all the ages of eternity, and to see 
more and more clearly, as it draws nearer unto God, the Light of the 
Divine Presence. This the Philosophy of the Ancient and Accepted Scot- 
tish Rite teaches him ; it encourages him to persevere by helping him to 
believe that his free will is entirely consistent with God's omnipotence 
and omniscience ; that He is not only infinite in power, and of infinite 
wisdom, but of infinite mercy, and has an infinitely tender pity and love 
for the frail and imperfect creatures that He has made. 






71 



It flows through old hushed 6gypt and tts sands, 

Lihc some grave, mighty thought, threading a dream; 

Hnd times, and things, as in that vision seem, 

Keeping along it, their eternal stands, 

Caves, pillars, pyramids, the shepherd bands, 

"Chat roamed through the young earth— the flag extreme 

Of high Sesostris, and that southern beam, 

Che laughing Queen that caught the world's great hands. 

Chen comes a mightier silence, stem and strong, 

Hs of a world left empty of its throng; 

Hnd the void weighs on us; and then to wahe, 

Hnd hear the fruitful stream lapsing along, 

'Cwixt villages, and think how we shall tahc 

Our own calm journey on, for human sahe. 

— Leigh Hunt. 



72 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 73 



CHAPTER IV. 

THE NILE— ORIGIN OF THE NAME FREE MASON- 
SCOTTISH RITE PHILOSOPHY. 

(5 I HE interpretation of the Osirian myth, according to Wilkinson's 



4L ■• 



" Ancient Egyptians,'' (chap. 13, page 79), is as follows : " Osiris, 
the inundation of the Nile ; Isis, the irrigated portion of the land of 
Egypt ; Horus, their offspring, the vapors and exhalations reproducing 
rain ; Buto, Latona, the marsh lands of Lower Egypt, where those' 
vapors were nourished ; Nephthys, the edge of the desert, occasionally 
overflowed during the high inundations ; Anubis, the son of Osiris and 
Nephthys, the production of that barren soil, in consequence of its being 
overflowed by the Nile ; Typhon, the sea, which swallowed up the Nile 
waters ; the conspirators, the drought overcoming the moisture from 
which the increase of the Nile proceeds ; the chest in which Osiris' body 
was confined, the banks of the river, within which it retired after the 
inundation ; the Tanaitic mouth, the lake and barren lands about it 
■which were held in abhorrence from their being overflowed by the river, 
without producing any benefit to the country ; the twenty-eight years of 
his life, the twenty-eight cubits to which the Nile rises at Elephantine, 
its greatest height (Pin larch, de hide, 84^) ; the seventeenth of Athor, 
the period when the river retires within its banks ; the Queen of 
Ethiopia, the southern winds preventing the clouds being carried south- 
wards ; the different members of Osiris' body, the main channels and 
canals by which the inundations passed into the interior ,of the country, 
where each was said to be afterwards buried ; that one which could not 
be recovered was the generative power of the Nile, which still continued 
in the stream itself, or as Plutarch thinks, it was thrown into the river, 
because ' water or moisture was the first matter upon which the genera- 
tive power of the deity operated and that principle by means of which 
all things capable of being were produced;' the victory of Horus, the 
powers possessed by the clouds in causing the successive inundations of 



74 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

the Nile ; Harpocrates, whom Isis brought forth about the winter 
solstice, those weak shootings of the corn after the inundations had 
subsided." 

Kenrick states in his "Ancient Egypt," page 346, vol. i: "The 
order in which the different events of the myth succeed to each other, 
accords very well with the supposition that they relate to the disappear- 
ance of the sun from the northern hemisphere and the train of conse- 
quences which it produces to the earth. His burial and disappearance 
took place in the autumn ; the voyage of Isis to discover his remains in 
the month of December ; the search for them in Egypt about midwinter ; 
and in the end of February, Osiris, entering into the moon, fertilizes the 
world. The representations of Osiris, as god of the invisible world and 
his being figured as a mummy naturally produced an explanatory myth. 
It accounts for an immortal god being subjected to death and for the 
association of Thoth and Horus, Isis, and Nephthys with him in his 
capacity of ruler of Ainenti. The erection of the coflBn at B^'blos 
alludes to the use of Osiride pillars in Egyptian architecture. The story 
of the discerption of his body explained the circumstance that the honor 
of his interment was claimed by so many different places in Egypt and 
the ceremony of the phallcphoria in his honor. The co-operation of a 
queen of Ethiopia in the plot against his life is significant of the national 
hostility of that people against the Egyptians and the prevalence of 
female dominion. The plotting against him in his absence may have 
been borrowed from the histor}' of Sesostris, as the account of his 
expeditions to distant countries for the purpose of civilizing them, 
betrays its origin in times when the Egj'ptians had become acquainted 
with foreign nations, and were disposed to glorify themselves as the orig- 
inal source of knowledge and the arts. The story of the dog, who 
assisted Isis to discover the son of Nephthys and attended her ever 
afterwards, explained the form of the god Anubis, who belongs to the 
Osirian circle ; that the animal with whose head this god is represented is 
not a dog, but a jackal, shows that the myth was accommodated to the 
general conception, not to the fact. The respect paid by the Egyptians 
to the words of children, a feature of their excessive superstitions, is 
explained by the aid which children gave to her in her researches. 
Another object of the m3'th was to explain the affinity which existed, or 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 75 

was believed to exist, between the worship of Isis in Egj'pt and that of 
the same or a similar divinity in Phoenicia, and especially at Byblos. 
The identity of these goddesses was believed and was the foundation of 
the legend of lo's wanderings. There was, at all events, a close resem- 
blance between the rites which related to the death and revival of 
Adonis at Byblos and of Osiris in Egypt." 

The river Nile has in every age been a source of mystery to those 
people who dwelt upon its banks and watched its annual inundations 
through the ever-succeeding centuries. The people who built such won- 
drous and stupendous fabrics^ to adorn and beautify their fertile valley, 
were the men who had made extraordinary intellectual advancement and 
who had arrived at a wonderful knowledge of the arts and sciences. We, 
to-day, stand in awe and admiration before the records of their prehistoric 
civilization, manifested in the ruined tombs, temples, and monolith sculp- 
tures that graced and adorned the banks of this grand old river Nihis, 
which throbbed and pulsated through the parched and thirsty soil of this 
remarkable valley, a veritable river of Life. The conquering armies of 
Egypt's grandest monarchs have been marshalled upon her banks in all 
the magnificence of barbaric splendor, glittering in all the panoply of 
war, laden with the spoils, followed by long trains of captives, who with 
trembling steps shrank from the mighty shouting populace, pouring forth 
from the various cities to welcome them home. Ah ! what mad revels 
they must have held ! What grand rejoicings and glorious feastings they 
may have had, we of to-day will never know, for there, where the earth 
shook with the tread of Egypt's mighty men of war, naught but silence 
remains. Where once swarmed the vast population of Egypt, and where 
shone resplendent the glorious temples of ancient Egyptian splendor, all 
is ruin, utter ruin ; and yet those ruins are the records of the grandeur 
of the Golden Age of ancient Egyptian glory, and the pld god Nilus still 
flows along in silent majesty, just as it did thousands of years before 
Pharaoh's daughter found the infant Moses sleeping upon its throbbing 
bosom (Exodus 2:5). 

The Nile is without exception, so far as its historical and ethno- 
graphical features are considered, the river of the world, the Amazon 
alone surpassing it in length. It is claimed, according to the latest 
discoveries, that its source is located in the Victoria Nyanza, but I differ 



76 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

witli this statement, and believe, like man\' others, that the actual source 
of this grand old river is in the Shimiju^ luhicJi rises fully j° south of the 
Equator. The trvie source of the river is positively unknown and " it 
ranks with the Amazon and Congo as one of the longest rivers of the 
world in length but not in volume." 

This wonderful and m3'Sterious river was worshipped b}^ the ancient 
Egyptians as a god, for without it the drifting desert sands would soon 
render this fertile valley as desolate as the Great Sahara itself, thus veri- 
fying the statement made by Herodotus, that — " Eg3^pt is the gift of 
the Nile." 

Kenrick states, in his "Ancient Eg}"pt," vol. i, page 3: "The geo- 
graphy and history of ever}^ country are closely connected w ith the origin 
and course of its rivers. In cold and humid climates, like our own, their 
neighborhood may have been avoided by the early inhabitants, who found 
more healthy abodes on the open side of the hills ; but in the East where 
many months succeed each other without anj- supply of rain, the vicinity 
of a perennial stream is the first condition of a settled and civilized life. 

" The histor}^ of the world begins on the banks of the great rivers 
of China, Indian, Assyria and Eg^'pt. The Nile, however, holds a 
far more important relation to the countr}- through which its flo-ws than 
any other river of the world. The courses of the Rhine, the Daniibe or 
the Rhone are only lines on the surface of German}- or France. Tlie 
valleys of the Euphrates and the Tigris were a ver}- small part of the 
dominions of the Assyrian and Babylonian Kings ; but the banks of the 
Nile are EgA'pt and Nubia. To live below the Cataracts and to drink of 
its waters was, according to the Oracle of Anion, to be an Egyptian 
(Herodotus, Book II, chapter 2S). Upwards or downwards, it is through 
the valley of the Nile that civilization and conquest have taken their 
course. We should, therefore, naturalh' begin hy tracing it froni its 
source to the sea ; but this is still impracticable. The Mesopotamian 
rivers have been followed to their sources amidst the mountains of 
Armenia and Kurdistan ; the traveller has even penetrated to the place 
where the Ganges bursts forth from the everlasting snows of the Him- 
ala^-a ; but the sacred river of Egypt still conceals its true fountains." 

The question that Herodotus (Book II, chapter 2S), asked of the 
priests of Egypt. Alexander, of the oracle of Ammon, and which learned 




LU 



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X 



o 

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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 77 

curiosity has so often addressed to geographical science, has been only 
partially answered. The source of this river has ever been a problem, as 
well as the cause of its annual overflow. Scientific men for thousands of 
years have ever endeavored to solve the mysteries surrounding it. The 
Egj^ptians themselves knew but very little about it, and all that we know 
respecting it is, that it comes pouring forth from the Victoria Nyanza 
into the Somerset River, thence to the Albert Nyanza, flowing on over 
the various rapids that are known as Bahr-el-Gabel. It then goes 
rushing on through Gondokoro, until it is joined by the great tributaries 
of the Bahr-cI-Ghasel (gazelle river), on the West and the Sobat on the 
East, in about 9° North latitude. From here it is known as the Balir- 
el-Abyad or the White Nile. Its course is now through the Soudan until 
it reaches KJiartian at which place it receives the waters of the Bahr- 
el-Azrek.^ or Blue Nile., which name it receives from the dark color of 
its waters. 

The white Nile is so-called on account of its contrast with the blue, 
or possibl}' from the whitish clay that is held in solution by its waters. 
The character of the white Nile is entirel}' and completely changed in 
its union with the turbid waters of the blue Nile, which furnishes about 
one-third of the volume of water now flowing along under the name of 
Bahr-cl-Nil. During the spring and summer months the blue Nile 
becomes very much swollen by rains falling in the mountains of Abys- 
sinia, and it may be considered the Ti'ue Nile that furnishes the mud and 
rich fertilizing substances that so enriches the soil and causes the crops 
to grow in such luxuriant abundance throughout the length and breadth 
of this most remarkable valley. 

This river rises according to Bruce (" Travels," volume 5, page 308,) 
" in North latitude 10° 59' and East longitude 36° 55', in the Kingdom 
of Abyssinia, at a height of nearly six thousand feet above the sea." He 
visited its sources, which had not been seen by any European for seven- 
teen years, and he professed to have discovered the true sources of the 
Bahr-el-Azrek or blue Nile. He says, " They are three springs, regarded 
by the natives with superstitious veneration, not large, but deep. To the 
sweetness and purity of this stream the Nile is said to owe its reputation, 
Avhich its waters have in all ages maintained." 



78 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

We have traced the white Nile from its so-called source to its 
junction with the blue Nile at Khartum, a distance of one thousand five 
hundred miles, from which place it flows along uninterruptedly through 
a miserable, desolate country, an absolutely barren waste of desert sands, 
receiving but one single tributary in its long jor.rney to the sea, and 
farther on to its two principal mouths, Rosetta and Damietta, that are 
distant from its confluence with the blue Nile, one thousand eight hun- 
dred miles. 

The Atbara becomes an affluent of the river Nile in about iS° North 
latitude and one hundred and eighty miles to the Northeast of the 
confluence of the blue and white Niles. After receiving the waters of 
the Atbara it flows in one continuous stream through Egypt, forcing its 
way over the hills and down steep rapids or cataracts, until it arrives at 
and passes Aswan, at the first cataract, five hundred and ninety miles 
from Cairo. It continues its onward flow until it reaches a point of 
separation at the apex of the Delta, which remains to-day unchanged. 

Murray informs us that at the first cataract the Nile "enters Egypt 

proper and continues at an average rate of about three miles an hour, 

increased to four and one-half at the height of the inundation, a quiet, 

winding course, varying in breadth from three hundred and fifty yards at 

Silsilis to one thousand one hundred yards at Minia. So far its course is 

the same as in the days of old, but a considerable change now takes 

place, for whereas it formerly discharged itself into the sea, by seven 

mouths, these are at present reduced to two. Its ancient name appears 

to have been Cercasorus, the modern representation of which may be 

placed at a point opposite Shubra. Here the river, anciently divided 

into three branches, the Pelusiac running East, the Kanopic running 

West, and the Sebennytic which flowed between the two, continuing the 

general northward direction hitherto taken by the Nile, and piercing the 

Delta through the centre. From this Sebynnitic branch two others were 

derived. The Tanitic and Mendesian, both of which emptied themselves 

between it and the Pelusiac branch. The lower part of the remaining 

two branches, the Bolbitine and the Phatmitic, were artificial and were 

constructed probabl}^ when the other outlets began to dry up. It is b}^ 

these two mouths that the river at the present day finds its outlet. At 

the point of bifurcation the general direction of the two streams is 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 79 

probably that of the old Pelusiac and Kanopic branches, where they 
gradually quit the extreme East and West course and continue more in 
the center of the Delta, the one to Damietta, the other to Rosetta, from 
which places they derive their modem appellation." 

The Atbara and the blue Nile are most assuredly the fertilizers of 
the valley of the Nile, giving to Egypt those wonderful productive forces 
for which it is so noted. These turbulent rivers are fed by a great 
number of mountain torrents in Abyssinia, which cut deep channels and 
gorges into the hillsides and mountains, carrying away with them 
immense quantities of a dark reddish-brown soil to the Atbara and blue 
Nile, whose waters are already charged with a black alluvial soil, very 
rich in fertilizing properties, which gives to the turbid waters of these 
rivers their peculiar color. 

On the entrance of these two affluent streams into the clear flowing 
waters of the Nile its characteristics become entirely changed, from the 
beautiful river flowing through the grassy plains of Soudan, bearing 
within its bosom the pellucid waters of the mountain lakes of interior 
Africa, to the mud and decayed organic matter which discolors the waters 
of the Nile. It is this alluvial soil and decayed organic substance that 
come down annually within the bosom of this grand old river which 
sustains and forms the land of the Nile, " The gift of the river." 

From Khartum this great and glorious stream falls one thousand, 
two hundred and forty feet in its course to the sea, cutting a deep groove 
through the rocks and Nubian sandstone, in many places to the depth of 
one thousand feet, bursting forth from a transverse barrier of beautiful 
Syenite granite that forms the boundary between Nubia and Egypt 
proper. In its wonderful passage through this immeuse obstruction, it 
opens to our view the magnificent red felspar crystals so extremely 
beautiful. Not far from here are the quarries of Syene, about a mile 
from Aswan. The site of this ancient city Syene is in latitude 24° 5' 
28", and is located on the East bank of the river. It has both post and 
telegraph offices, and a population of about eleven thousand inhabitants. 
An immense amount of trade is done here with the Soudanese and 
Abyssinians, carried on through the medium of the camel. There is a 
very short railroad running from here, up above the cataract, to the town 
of Shellal, which was of great service to the British during the trouble 



80 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

in the Soudan. I shall give you, my dear Brothers, a more detailed 
account in a future chapter of this work. From the quarries of S3'ene 
many of Egypt's basalt and beautiful red granite monoliths have been 
taken, and this place is well worth a visit from the Masonic student 
desirous of seeing for himself these celebrated quarries of the ancient 
Egj'ptians. He will find specimens of work done b}' the craft long 
centuries before authenticated history, such as a very large obelisk, 
gigantic columns and peculiar stones that have never been removed, but 
remain just as the craftsmen left them when '''' called fioni labor?'' 

In viewing this unfinished work of the ancient craftmen, one can 
scarcely believe that long drifting centuries have passed and gone since 
these stones were quarried by hands the most skilled of any which the 
world has ever heard. One would hardl}' credit his senses if told that 
thousands of 3rears have elapsed since our ancient brethren wrought in 
these quarries and exhibited such satisfactory specimens of their skill, 
the ver}^ chips looking as bright to-day as in the early ages of Pharaonic 
histor3\ The whole world, to-da}?, stands in awe and admiration before 
the. ruined tombs, temples and monuments which demonstrate their 
wonderful knowledge of architecture and sculpture, evidences of which 
are to be seen in the manj^ ruined cities of ancient Egj'pt. Somewhere 
about the beginning of the siinnncr solstice the people of the Nile valley 
began to look auxiouslj^ at the old god Nilus, for signs of the anniial 
inundation ; but more especiallj- was this so of the peasant, because all 
his hopes M-ere centered upon the overflow, as he was dependent upon the 
fruits of the field for the sustenance of himself, famil}- and domestic 
animals. He longed to be enabled to plow the soil, sow his seed and reap 
an abundance therefrom, which was assured whenever the waters reached 
the heighth that insured good crops. When the expectations were 
'realized what grand .feastings and rejoicings took place in honor of the 
^^ Lclct-cii-A^ukla, or the A'lglit of the Drop?'' which event occurred on the 
night preceding the eleventh of the Coptic month of Bcuna\ corres- 
ponding to the seventeenth of June. 

One who has never been able to witness this celebrated festival 
should assuredl}'- visit the village of Etnbaba on the west bank of the 
river on the A^iglit of the Drop. It was believed b}- the ancient Egyp- 
tians that a miraculous tear-drop fell from the eve of the goddess Isis, 



EGYPT. THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 81 

upon the bosom of the water of the Nile, which caused the river to swell 
and overflow its banks and fructify the whole of this fertile valley, 
therefore on this special night the people of Egypt have, from time 
immemorial, feasted and rejoiced in honor of the coming of their god 
Nilus. At his appearance the same things that are done in Egypt 
to-day were done, no doubt, on a grander scale by the ancient Egyptians, 
long before the foundations of the Pyramids were laid, or that wonder- 
ful monolith the Sphinx " looked to the East," and long centuries before 
Homer sang of " hundred-gated Thebes." 

Through every dynasty of Pharaonic history we find that the 
Egyptians have worshipped their old god Nilus, not as God, but only 
emblematic of the Divine Essence Itself. Both before and at every 
inundation, these people would perform certain rites and ceremonies, in 
order to insure a plentiful overflow. We learn from some Arabian 
Avriters that these ancient people prayed earnestly and incessantly for a 
bountiful inundation, and during some of the ceremonies sacrificed a 
virgin to the god of their river — a custom continued until Egypt passed 
under the yoke of Moslem rule. The Copts continued to observe certain 
rites and preserve a relic of the virgin sacrifice in their peculiar cere- 
monies. Heliodorus gives us an account of the festivals given in honor 
of the annual inundations, as do many other writers, and to-day the 
Khedive and state officials at the festival of ^^ Mosim el-Khaleeg''^ (which 
takes place somewhere about the middle of August), cuts the dam at 
Cairo, letting the water of the High Nile flow thiough its old bed, when 
an heifer is slain and distributed to the people for food, who go about 
rejoicing, assured of a year of plenty, while every one is filled with joy, 
and happiness reigns supreme. 

These ceremonies carry us back to the ancient days of Meneptah, 
B. c. 1400, when the people chanted their grand " Hymn to the Nile," 
one verse of which I quote you : 

"Hail, all hail, O Nile, to thee! 
To this land thyself thou showest, 
Coming tranquilly to give 
Life, that Egypt so may live : 
Ammon, hidden is thy source, 
But it fills our hearts with glee ! 



82 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

Thou the gardens overflowest, 

With their flowers beloved of Ra ; 

Thou, for all the beasts that are, 

Glorious river. 

Art life-giver ; 

To our fair fields ceaselessly, 

Thou thy waters dost supply, 

And dost come 

Thro' the middle plain descending. 

Like the sun thro' middle sky ; 

Loving good, and without ending, 

Bringing corn for granary ; 

Giving light to every home, 

O thou mighty Ptah„" 

This hymn was no doubt the principal one sung during the festivals 
of the Niloa. I would have been pleased to have quoted the entire 
hjmm, btit it is too long, and I simply give the first verse. " Rawnsley " 
tells us that this " poem is speciall}- interesting, as identifjang the Nile 
with Ra^ Avion and PtaJi^ as well as other gods. This assures us of the 
complete identification of the reigning monarch with deity, as well as 
giving a realization of how entirely unknown the sources of the Nile 
were at that day, and how the myster}^ of its risings affected the Egyp- 
tians with the thought of a hand unseen, working the yearly miracle of 
inundation, and giving its j^early blessing." 

Through the drifting centuries the Egyptian people have ever ob- 
served this festival, and Christian domination has thus far never been able 
to stamp it out. The pecttliarities and ceremonies still continue, but not 
on such a grand scale as in the hoary civilization of Egyptian splendor. 

From this time forward the voice of the Munadi en-Nil (Nile Crier) 
will announce to the people the progress of the rising river. One of the 
first things observed in the swelling waters is its reddish color. As soon 
as this color makes its appearance the people hasten down to the river 
and collect a plentiful supply, which they store away in jars for future 
use. It begins, soon afterward, to assume a greenish color, during which 
period the water is considered very unhealthy. After this decayed, 
organic matter is swept away, it once more assumes the reddish color and 
■with it the delicious, sweet and healthy drinking water such as the kings 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 83 

of Persia always used at their tables. The river increases continually for 
a period of almost three months, sometimes having a final rise in the 
early part of October, after which it gradually falls to its natural flow. 
The prosperity of the country depends, in a very great measure, upon 
the height of the inundation. Too great an overflow would cause an 
immense loss of life and property, while an insufiicent rise would 
occasion a great deal of distress, simply because large portions of laud 
could not be flooded, in consequence of which no crops would grow in a 
great many places throughout the land of Egypt. 

To-day there are wonderful improvements going on for the purpose 
of preserving the waters of the river from running to waste. To this end 
two very large dams are under construction, and nearing completion, in 
Upper Egypt. One is to be constructed at Asyut, and the other at 
Aswan, both of which are expected to be completed during the year 
1903. The dam at the latter place will form a reservoir fully one 
hundred and twenty miles in length, having a storage capacity of about 
one billion three hundred and ninety-three million and twenty thousand 
cubic yards of water, which will form quite a lake in itself. At the point 
selected for the building of the dam at Aswan the river is fully two 
thousand two hundred yards wide at " High Nile.'' The reservoir, when 
completed, will be one of the most magnificent specimens of engineering, 
for the purpose of irrigation, known to the world. The cost of 
construction of this stupendous piece of work has been estimated at 
$25,000,000. 

The inhabitants of this valley were taxed in ancient times, as 
well as at the present day, according to the rise of the river. In all 
ages the government had to be supported, just the same as any other 
nation, " by taxation," and the duty of seeing that taxation was duly 
administered belonged to the Mudir of every province, who would, of 
course, have to be assisted by a number of inferior ofi&cers,'such as Vice- 
Governors, or Wckil^ a chief clerk, a regular tax gatherer, an account- 
ant, a Kadi or supreme judge, a superintendent of police, a supervisor 
of canals, and the physician of the province. These were the officers 
that composed the general council for each province in Eg3^pt, while in 
small towns the Nazir el-Kism, or sub-governor, was under the general 
supervision of the Mudir^ as well as the Sheikh el-Belea's of the villages, 



84 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

who had to render an account of all monies collected to the general 
council. Those officials composed all the general officers, as well as a 
part of the inferior officers, who were legally authorized to collect the 
taxes of the provinces throughout the whole length and breadth of Egypt. 
The principal ones were, the land tax, income tax, market tax, and palm 
tax. These are some of the taxes collected to- day, but C. Ritter says in 
Baedeker >io/c^ page 319, "Lower Egypt:" 

" The rate of taxation was determined in ancient times in accordance 
with the height of the inundation. All the authorities from Herodotus 
down to Leo Africanus agree in stating that the Nile must rise sixteen 
cubits, or Egyptian ells, in order that the land may produce good crops. 
The famous statue of Father Nile, in 'the Vatican, is accordingly sur- 
rounded by sixteen figures of genii, representing these sixteen ells. To 
this day the height of the overfloAv influences taxation and the land 
which is artificially irrigated paj^s less than that reached by the river 
itself. The object of the government is always to induce belief that the 
inundation is favorable, and the sworn Sheikh of the Nilometer, is there- 
fore, subject to the influence of the police at Cairo. The same political 
motives from which, in ancient times, the custody of the Nilometers was 
entrusted to the priests alone, still prevent the Egyptian public from 
obtaining access to the Mikyas (Nilometers) in the island of Roda. The 
real height of the water is always concealed and false statements made, 
as it is the object of the fiscal authorities to levy, if possible, the full 
rate of taxation every year, whatever the height of the Nile may have 
been. This traditional dishonest}^ in the use of the Nilometer was first 
discovered by the French engineers during the occupation of Eg3'pt by 
Napoleon." 

The waters which flood this fertile valle}' during every inundation 
contain such wonderful powers to stimulate vegetable life into remark- 
able growth, that no artificial fertilizing agent is needed, but only such 
as old god Nilus gives. This is sufficient for all purposes, as it contains, 
according to Kenrick, in every one hundred parts of water, " forty-eight 
cla}', nine of carbon, eighteen parts of carbonate of lime, four of car- 
bonate of magnesia, besides portions of silicia, and oxide of iron." 

There is no question in my mind but that the river Nile was per- 
sonified by the ancient Egyptians and received divine honors throughout 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 85 

the length and breadth of the Nile valley, as all the information I 
have gathered during ni}' researches upon this subject among ancient 
authorities and modern historians only strengthens my belief in this 
matter. Heliodorus informs us that the river was personified, and from 
what Herodotus tells us in Book II, chap. 90, this fact is proven, conse- 
quently we have good ground for believing that Old god Nibis was wor- 
shipped throughout the whole of Egypt. We have no reason to doubt 
his statement, when he says that " none may touch the corpse, not even 
the friends or relatives, but only the priests of the Nile,''"' showing that 
whenever a person was drowned in its waters it was the special duty of 
these priests to attend solely to the disposal of the body, hence, temples 
must have been erected in every Nome and every city throughout the 
" Land of Egypt." We have evidence of the fact that this god Nilus 
was worshipped in man}^ cities. 

The festival of the Niloa, of which I have already spoken, was 
for the express purpose of welcoming the rising river and the coming 
flood. Heliodorus states in iT/// 9: 9, that "it was one of the principal 
festivals of Egypt and was celebrated at the summer solstice, or at the 
first appearance of the rising of the waters." The ancient Egyptians 
believed that if all the peculiar rites and ceremonies were not properly 
observed and everything done in accordance with custom and usage, the 
river would not overflow its banks to the height required for an 
abundant crop, and an assured harvest, when a famine would result. 
In order to avert such a terrible catastrophe not one single ceremony 
should be neglected, and the priest would be required to give his offering 
in money, while the various ofiicials of the different Nomes would have to 
cast their gifts of gold upon the throbbing bosom of the flowing river, 
in order to carry out the programme that had been established long cen- 
turies before the sons of Jacob went down into the " Land of Egypt " to 
buy corn from their brother Joseph ; aye, long before the foundations of 
the Pyramids of Gizeh were laid or the Sphinx looked to the East and 
saw the glory of the Sun God Ra, when its glorious rays lit up this 
wonderous valley in the radiant beauty of Light. 

Now this brings me to a very interesting subject, one that should 
interest every Masonic student and Free Mason throughoiit the world 
universal, and that is the meaning and origin of the word Free-Mason, 



86 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

because a thorougli understanding of these two words J^ree and Mason will 
verif}' the statements that are made in our rituals, that " Free Masonry- 
has been in existence from time immemorial, and that the best men of 
every epoch of the world's history have been members of our fraternity." 
It will also prove that our very name /^?ve Mason originated in the 
Valley of the Nile, and that our glorious Fraternity existed thousands 
of years before Christ, as well as that the Craftsmen who wrought in 
the quarries and laid the foundation of the Pyramids were members of 
our beloved fraternity. 

I have often asked Brethren of the " Ro3'al Craft," when in confer- 
ence assembled : Why are we called Free Masons ? Not one of the 
man}' to whom this question has been propounded could give a definite 
or hicid account of its origin, or win* we are called by this name. In 
the third chapter I make the claim that our glorious fraternity originated 
in the " Land of the Vedas " and w^as cradled on the banks of the Nile. 
Therefore in order to prove this fact I will state that the ver}' name 
Free Mason proves its antiquity, as well as the country in which it was 
cradled, and consequently verifies my statement that " i/ is a lineal 
descendant of tJtc Ancient Egyptian Mystej-ies?'' 

Now, m}^ dear Brothers, the words Free Mason do not belong to the 
English language, neither do they originate in the Latin or Greek 
languages, all of which they antedate, by thousands of 3'ears, and come 
to us from the Egypto-Coptic language, the language that was used by 
the Ancient Eg3'ptians in the Golden Age of Egypt. The Copts are 
most certainly the lineal descendants of the people who migrated from 
India to the valle}^ of the Nile and adorned its banks with stupendous 
specimens of Cj'clopean architecture, whose written language was 
expressed in three distinct forms. The first of which was the Hiero- 
glyphs^ the second the Hieratic and the third tlie Demotic. 

Champollin was one of the most indefatigable students of those 
ancient Egyptian writings and after ver}- careful and painstaking inves- 
tigation of the various hierogl3'phic inscriptions throughout the tombs, 
temples and pap3a-us of Eg3'pt, he gave to the world his celebrated 
Granwiaif'e Egyptienne., wherein he proves that the Hieratic was derived 
from the hieroglyphs. There is no question but that the Hierophants 
and priests of Egypt preserved all their sacred writings, secrets, etc., in 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 87 

these early hieroglyphs, as the first two of these writings belonged 
especially to the priesthood, while the Demotic was used principally by 
the people for commercial purposes. This latter was a degenerate from 
the other two and it was the most difficult to understand. I do not 
desire to enter into a long description of the writings of this ancient 
people, but simply to state that the words Free Mason are derived from 
the ancient Egypto-Coptic. In that language the word " Phree " meant 
— Light, Knowledge, Wisdom, or Intelligence, while " MassEN " was the 
plural of " i]/(P.? " signifying children; hence we were and are known 
as children of, or Sons of Light, Wisdom, or Intelligence, because Light 
signified knowledge to the Candidate or Initiate, and it is that which 
every Brother is in search of, More Light. Thoth signifies the intellect 
and mes a child, consequently Thothmes means child of Thoth, or a man 
of intelligence. Ra was the Sun God and Mes the child, therefore the 
Great Rames-es was considered to be a child of the sun god Ra, or Son 
of the Sun. 

Surely the very name Free Mason ought to convince any person from 
whence it is derived, prove the antiquity of the Fraternity, and demon- 
strate beyond the shadow of a doubt that it is far older than the 
" Golden Fleece, or Roman Eagle," as the Coptic language was, in sub- 
stance, the same as the spoken language of the Ancient Egyptians. 
Now, in proving the name Free Mason to have been of Ancient Egyptian 
origin, it follows, that it must have been connected with the Ancient 
Egyptian Mysteries, for the teachings of the one are identical with the 
other, if rightly understood, and I do not stand alone in this opinion. 
I may possibly claim for it more than some other authorities, who 
have not thoroughly investigated this subject. Yet I feel positively 
certain that I shall adduce sufficient evidence to prove and sustain my 
assertions, that the esoteric teachings of our beloved Scottish Rite of Free 
Masonry is a lifteal descendant of the Ancient Mysteries, whose esoteric 
teachings have ever been a guide to higher planes of spiritual unfold- 
ment, through an understanding of Nature and her wonderful manifes- 
tations ; whose revelations from the known to the hitherto unknown, 
from the land of effect to the realm of cause, from man through a pro- 
found Pantheism to his God, binding us, the human family, together in 
stronger bonds than were ever imposed by any human law, because 



88 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

the Perfect Mason is taught to understand himself and in so doing he 
understands the true meaning of the Universal Brotherhood of 
Man, irrespective of race, creed, caste, or color. 

I had the pleasure of sitting in the Grand Lodge F. & A. M. of the 
State of Washington, when the Committee on Jurisprudence (Brothers 
T. M. Reed, of Olympia, J. E. Edmiston, of Dayton, and Wm. H. Upton, 
of Seattle) laid before that body the question pertaining to Negro 
Masonry. Two of this committee, who submitted the report recognizing 
the negro as a man and Brother, were born and raised in the Southern 
States. In making their report they declared that honor, justice and 
right were insurmountable, and that prejudice was a secondar}^ considera- 
tion with them, as all they wanted was to have justice done to those who, 
like ourselves, were searching for " More Light " on the esoteric 
teachings of Masonry, in order to come to a better understanding of 
themselves and the potential forces latent within them. 

Our revered Brother Albert Pike, states in " Morals and Dogmas," 
page 220, that: — "The whole world is but one Republic, of which each 
Nation is a family, and every individual a child. Masonry, not in any 
wise derogating from the differing duties which the diversity of states 
requires, tends to create a new people, which, composed of Men of many 
nations and tongues, shall all be bound together by the bonds of Science, 
Morality and Virtue. 

" Essentially philanthropic, philosophical and progressive, but it is 
neither a political party nor a religious sect. It embraces all parties 
and all sects, to form from among them all a vast fraternal association. 
It recognizes the dignity of human nature, and man's right to so much 
freedom as he is fitted for ; and it knows nothing that should place one 
man below another^ except ignorance, debasement and crime, and the 
necessity of subordination to lawful will and authority." 

Rebold, in his "History of Masonry," page 62, says: "The real 
object of Freemasonry maj^ be summed up in these words : To efface 
from among men the prejudices of caste, the conventional distinctions of 
color, origin, opinion, nationality ; to annihilate fanaticism and supersti- 
tion ; to extirpate national discord, and with it extinguish the firebrand 
of war ; in a word — to arrive, by free and pacific progress, at one formula 
or model of eternal and universal right, according to which each 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 89 

individual humau being shall be free to develop every faculty with which 
he ma}- be endowed, and to concur heartily, and with the fulness of his 
strength, in the bestowment of happiness upon all, and thus to make of 
the whole human race one family of brothers, united by affection, wisdom 
and labor. 

J. D. Buck, in his very valuable little work entitled, " Mystic 
Masonry," states that " The qualiiied Brotherhood of Man is the basis 
of all ethics, and the Great Republic is the ideal state. If these concepts 
were accepted and acted upon, there would result time and opportunity, 
and the power to apprehend the deeper problems of the origin, nature, 
and destiny of man. ' Man is not man as yet.' What he may be, and 
what he might do, under favorable conditions, is very seldom even 
dreamed. We never build bej-ond our ideals. We habitually fall below 
them." 

I do not wish to dwell upon Man or Universal Brotherhood now, but 
shall speak of the subject in another chapter, when entering into a full 
interpretation of the building of man under the badge of a Mason. In 
order to do this, I shall bring forward the profound philosophy of the far 
East, and the design upon my trestle board will be : the white leather 
apron with the bib turned up, to demonstrate the Lower Quartemary and 
the Upper Triad. In my demonstrations I shall trace nature in all its 
gradations, through elements, crystals, plants and animals to quarternary 
man, up to the present evolution, thence through body, soul and spirit 
into the eternal essence of all things. 

Our Rite came down to us from the masters and adepts of India, and 
made its dwelling place upon the banks of that wonderful river Nile, 
where, as the ancient mysteries, it preserved those sublime and beautiful 
esoteric teachings of the ancient Wisdom which will eventually enlighten 
the world and point out the way leading to an understanding of 
the symbology. Then will the aspirant begin to realize that the cere- 
monies, at the initiatory services, are simply unwritten aids, more sug- 
gestive than words and far more pregnant with meaning than knowledge 
imparted by books. It appeals to his eye, impresses itself upon his 
brain, and stimulates his memory to action, so that long after the cere- 
monies have passed, he will be enabled to recall every incident by a 
simple effort of his will. Thus through memory he can interpret, study 



90 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

and develop for himself the true meaning of the symbols and ceremonies 
of our glorious Scottish Rite. 

What the world of to-day, and generations unborn, owe to Free 
Masonry will never be fully realized. The fraternity has always been, 
and always will be an incentive to enlightenment, liberality and educa- 
tion. During the " Dark Ages " it was only in the lodge-room that our 
scientific and philosophical brethren dared make known any of the inval- 
uable discoveries, or profound philosophical knowledge, for fear of the 
inquisition, which was supported by the bigotry, fanaticism and ignor- 
ance of tyrants, backed b}' a superstitious and uncultured populace. But 
to-day we find it working, as it has ever done, in the interest of 
humanity. In fact ii is ilie Advocate and Champion of the Rights of the 
People by the best men of the world, who have an advantage over our 
ancient brethren, by being enabled to exemplify openly, the grand truths 
taught behind the closed doors of our Lodges, Chapters, Councils and 
Consistories; the glorious heritage of man, Liberty, Equality and 
Fraternity. 

Brother Albert Pike says in " Morals and Dogmas," page 25, et seq : 
" The best gift we can bestow on man is Manhood. It is that which 
Masonry is ordained of God to bestow on its votaries ; not sectarianism 
and religious dogma ; not a rudimentary morality, that may be found in 
the writings of Confucius, Zoroaster, Seneca and the Rabbis in the Pro- 
verbs and Ecclesiastes ; not a little and cheap common-school knowledge ; 
but Manhood, Science and Philosophy. 

" Not that Philosoph}- or Science is in opposition to Religion. For 
Philosophy is but the knowledge of God and the Soul, which is derived 
from observation of the manifold action of God and the Soul, and from a 
wise analogy. It is the intellectual guide which the religious sentiment 
needs. The true religious philosophy of an imperfect being is not a 
■ system of creed ; but as SocRATES thought, an infinite search or approxi- 
mation. Philosophy is that intellectual and moral progress, which the 
religious sentiment inspires and ennobles. 

"As to Science, it could not walk alone while religion was stationary. 
It consists of those matured inferences, from experience, which all other 
experience confirms. It realizes and unites all that was trul}^ valuable, 
in both the old schemes of mediation, — one heroic, or the sj^stem of action 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 91 

and efifort ; and the mystical theory of spiritual, contemplative Gom- 
munion. 

" The first Scriptures for the human race were written by God on 
the Earth and the Heavens. The reading of these Scriptures is Science. 
Familiarity with the grass and the trees, the insects and the infusoria, 
teaches us deeper lessons of love and faith than we can glean from the 
writings of Fbnelon and Augustine. The great Bible of God is ever 
open before mankind." 

]\Iasonr\' is not a Religion, for Religion does not exist without a 
dogma, a creed and a priesthood ; it is the basic philosophical idea which 
underlies all religions, and which appears distinctly as soon as the mass 
of theological allegories and interpretations are removed. This fact can 
be conclusively demonstrated by any thoughtful Mason, be he Elu^ 
Knight or Prince, and he will be astonished at the identity of the claims 
that are made by the various sects into which mankind is divided. Their 
metaphysical conceptions of the Divine Principle of man's essence and 
future destiny are almost the same; their ethical conclusions and rules 
for daily conduct in life are absolutely identical. It is quite plain that 
the conflict between them is merely a war of words and petty details, 
showing Religion is but an effort to satisfy the innate religious feeling 
existing in every human being. Each and every one is a partial revela- 
tion of the One Truth, adapted to the special capacities of comprehending 
the epoch in which they appeared, more or less adored by the peculiar 
mental bias of the people among whom it was evolved. The Masonic 
student will find connecting links between the ancient teachings of long 
ago and those of to-day, tending to prove the existence of a very ancient 
S3fstem, or body of occult knowledge, which can be traced in its influence 
and esoteric forms, through the middle-ages ; through and beyond the 
Greek and Roman civilizations, and their contemporary dynasties in the 
East ; through Egypt, Persia and India, until it is lost in the hoary ages 
of the past, far back into those ages which saw the birth and childhood 
of the Aryan race in the valley of Hindustan. 

This great fact will be forced upon every student and thinker that 
ALL Religions of the World have been derived from the one primal 
source — the Great Wisdom Religion — The Secret Doctrine of the 
Initiates of old. Manj? names have been given at different periods of 



92 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

the world's history, to this body of occult knowledge, the key to which 
was kept a profound secret by its custodians, those who, through Initia- 
tion had earned a right to its deepest mysteries. Sages, philosophers, 
Adepts, and Mystics in all ages have drawn upon this Secret Doctrine for 
their knowledge and inspiration ; who have hinted as plainly as they 
dared, at its more recondite secrets, and transcendental knowledge. The 
nineteenth century has witnessed a very great revival of knowledge and 
science which has excited widespread and profound attention, and it is 
not to be wondered that such has been the case, when we take into con- 
sideration that Initiates have ever warred against Ignorance^ and con- 
tended against Tyranny and Fanaticism. . 

These forces caused the Secret Doctrine to emerge from the obscur- 
ity into which it had fallen through the superstition, iguorance and 
fanaticism of the Middle Ages, as well as the influence of ecclesiastical 
religions, which dominated the world for so many long and weary cen- 
turies. The element of supernaturalism is fast disappearing under the 
exertions and influence of the teachings of our Rite and its scientific gen- 
eralizations. Any doctrine or teaching, presenting itself for acceptance 
among the readers and thinkers of this twentieth century, must undergo 
this test first, as whether it can stand in line with the law of conservation, 
of energy, and the ordered sequence of Caiise and Effect, discoverable in 
every domain of natural phenomena. This is the fundamental claim 
of our beloved Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Masonry, w'hich 
obtained its knowledge and Wisdom from the Secret Doctrine of the 
Ancient Mysteries, the fountain from which learned men of every age 
have drawn their high inspirational force and intellectual development. 
From this source it can be proven, fully and undisputably, that a tran- 
scendental knowledge of man's nature has always existed in the world — 
so far at all events as we have any historical records — and that all these 
great Religions and Philosophies are but the echoes or reflections of these 
occult doctrines, overlaid and perverted in most instances by ages of 
superstition and ignorance. 

The revival of this knowledge will clear away entirely that element 
of supernaturalism in religion Avhich is the great cause of the total rejec- 
tion of all religious doctrines by the intelligent thinkers of the present 
day. It will do more than this. In freeing religion from its supernatu- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 93 

ral element, its work will be constiictive of a new and surer basis for 
the practice of religion, as a matter of conduct instead of belief. The 
present crisis in the religious world is produced, not so much by sheer 
disbelief, as b^- uncertaint3^ This is above all an age of inquiry, and 
woe betide an}' teaching, religious or scientific, which cannot make a 
decent pretense of fulfilling its undertakings, and giving its raison d^etre 
in no uncertain voice. That religion, to-day, is making little or no head- 
way toward the regeneration of the world, is manifest to any one who 
has taken the trouble to make himself acquainted with the social life 
of the people. 

Hideous miser}', and open unblushing vice, have never been more 
rampant than to-day, and in the presence of this, official religion is dumb 
and helpless. It knows not the cause and still less the remed}'. It is 
deaf to the voice of materialism, loudly scoffing at its claims and derides 
its fancied remedies. 

It must not be supposed that Masonry is adverse to Christianity, or 
to an}' other religion in a pure form. It does, however, assert that the 
pure gem of Truth, upon which it is founded, is obscured by a mass of 
useless creed, under which it is lost to sight. Masonry desires to 
strengthen and not to weaken the hands of the Religionist. It does not 
proclaim nor teach any new revelation for a chosen people, but a complete 
philosophy, explaining every problem of human life to the entire satisfac- 
tion of the most severe logician. There is an array of Truths as old as 
mankind itself, scattered here and there in the fragments which are found 
in every religion, ancient or modern, tested to the utmost by strict 
philosophical and scientific processes, divested of all the fanciful additions 
of superstition, based not on authority, not on blind faith ; but on reason- 
able demonstrations by comparisons, analysis and universal applicability; 
the crucial test of all hypothesis. 

j\Iasonic esoteric teachings do not crave acceptance from her 
initiates, but only asks loyal investigation. " Every one is entirely free 
to reject and dissent from- whatsoever may seem to him untrue or 
unsound. It is only required of him that he shall weigh what is taught, 
and give it fair hearing and unprejudiced judgment." It does not 
demand belief, but knowledge. It is a science, not a Religion — the 
science of man's relation to the Universe. It is a well known fact, that in 



94 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

ancient times, religion and science were not the irreconcilable adversaries 
they are to-day, and that the sages of India and Egypt were, at the same 
time, the spiritual advisors of the people, and the zealous keepers of the 
scientific knowledge. Did not Plato and Pythagoras, the great Grecian 
philosophers, go to the Egyptian priests for instruction ? Did not Jesus 
of Nazareth dispute with the doctors of his time, and astound them by 
his unaccountable knowledge ? Were not the so-called miracles of all 
religious reformers or prophets, but a mere manifestation of superior 
knowledge of the laws of nature, which, to the ignorant, appeared as 
supernatural ? 

Unfortunately both science and religion have long forgotten their 
palmiest days, when they were twins, walking hand in hand together. 
But, at the present time, they have degenerated into gross materialism. 
Science purposely narrowing its field of observation to the domain of 
matter, leaving metaphysical investigations to people untrained in the 
accuracy of scientific methods. Religion dwarfs the conception of God 
into that of a personal being, whom each votary endows with more or less 
human attributes, while Masonry avoids both errors. It follows Science 
on its chosen ground, antagonizing it only when it becomes materialistic, 
negative an'd narrow minded. It respects the religious feelings of all, 
when sincere, regardless of the form in which thej^ riia}- be clothed ; but 
refuses to any kind of religion the monopoly of Truth. 



Li 



Ancient iH^Jstcvics-^cottisj) WXt ilJfiilosopJj). 



95 



"H babe, new-born, lay on its mother's breast, 

It was not new, but old! Hye, older than the stars! 

■For 'twas the self-same soul whose essence was 

'Che gathered rays from Rierarcbies, higher far 

1[^han present man with his small brain can dream! 

Che Bierarchies who their essence draw 

from the One Hbsolute. 

Nay! nor was the body new, except in shape, 

But formed of that which is imperishable, 

CClhose spirit of all matter essence is; 

<)Qhose atoms had built many forms, the abodes 

CClherein this soul had dwelt— this pilgrim of old." 



96 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 97 



CHAPTER V. 

ANCIENT MYSTERIES-SCOTTISH RITE PHILOSOPHY. 






FTER carefully searching throiigli many countries and various 
sources, I find that the ancient mysteries originated in the 
hoary civilization of a prehistoric age. That all knowledge of 
Science, Arts and Philosophy are due to the ancient wisdom that per- 
meated the Indian, Mazdean and Egyptian mysteries, whose Hierophants 
gave forth freely the sublime teachings of this ancient wisdom, to all 
those who, after due trial, were found worthy and well qualified to receive 
them, and then only, under deep and binding obligations. I also found, 
that in all those different countries, these mysteries had a common origin, 
with a purpose in view identical one with the other. That purpose was 
for the upbuilding of humanity by instructing it in the sublime and pro- 
found truths of the ancient wisdom, which truths to-day underlie all 
religions and all philosophies. The principle of these mysteries, and the 
''''fans et oi'igo " of all the rest, was the Mysteries of India, whose basic 
source of all knowledge and intellectual advancement was the Secret 
Doctrine of the adepts and sages of that country, who taught that 
" there is an Omnipresent, Eternal, Boundless and Immtnable Pri^iciple 
back of all manifestations.''^ It is that which we call the Supreme 
Architect of the Universe, the Absolute and Infinite Deity. This 
fact was impressed upon the initiate of old, that he might be enabled to 
know that this Eternal Absolute Reality, is the eternal cause of all the 
manifestations and differentiations in the Kosmos. It was also taught 
that the Universal Brotherhood of Man is the basis of all ethics, and 
that the grandest study for man, was man, as in coming to an under- 
standing of himself and his own potential forces he would be enabled to 
come to a better comprehension of God and Nature. 

The esoteric teachings of the ancient mysteries is what gave to 
Greece her civilization and culture, which resulted in her wonderful intel- 



98 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

lectual advancement ; force of character to her citizens, wisdom to her 
statesmen, and placed her at the head of all civilized nations. This fact 
is demonstrated in history as, after the " Golden Age " of Egypt, she 
was pre-eminently above all other nations and peoples, through the 
development of her knowledge of science, art, philosophy, literature, 
poetry, etc. All this was due to the profound and sublime teachings that 
permeated the ancient mysteries. 

In order that you, my dear Brothers and readers, may be enabled to 
understand something about these ancient mysteries, I shall quote you 
from various authorities, and try to explain the sublimity and grandeur 
of the teachings which pertained, not only to the Ancient Mysteries, but 
to our own glorious Scottish Rite, a true and lineal descendent of those 
ancient institutions or fraternities. These gave to Greece her culture 
and refinement, and to Rome her civilization. I want 3'ou, my dear 
Brothers, to distinctly understand that all the knowledge and wisdom 
that belonged to the Indian, Mazdean, and the ancient Egyptian Mys- 
teries, have been preserved, and are now taught, in all their sublimity and 
grandeur, in our own beloved Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite. 

Grote in his " History of Greece," Vol. I, Chapter xvi, page 3S8, 
says : " In the Elusinian and Samothracian Mysteries was treasured up 
the Secret Docinne of the theological and philosophical myths, which had 
once constituted the primitive legendary stock of Greece, in the hands 
of the original priesthood, and in ages anterior to Homer. Persons who 
had gone through the preliminary ceremonies of initiation, were per- 
mitted at length to hear, though under strict obligations of secrecy, this 
ancient and cosmogonic doctrine, revealing the distinction of man, and 
the certainty of posthumous rewards and punishments, all disengaged 
from the corruptions of poets, as well as from the sj^mbols and allegories 
under which they still remain buried in the eyes of the vulgar. The 
Mysteries of Greece were thus traced up to the earliest ages, and repre- 
sented the only faithful depositories of that purer theolog}^ and physics, 
which had originally been communicated, though under unavoidable 
inconveniences of a symbolical expression, by an enlightened priesthood^ 
who were highly educated in the sciences, philosophies, arts and ethics, 
and thoroughly instructed, having their origin either in Egypt, or in the 
East among the rude and barbarous Greeks, to whom their knowledge 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 99 

was communicated under the veil of symbols." These teachings embodied 
a profound theological philosophy and inculcated great and glorious 
moral truths upon those Initiates who desired a knowledge of the 
Ancient Wisdom^ and these teachings eventually became lost, that is to 
the great majority ; but they were preserved by the few and taught in 
the various Mysteries handed down from generation to generation, until 
to-day we find them in all their sublimity and grandeur in our own 
glorious Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite. 

Should any man or Mason doubt the verity of this statement, let 
either him or them read that scholarly production of our revered Brother 
General Albert Pike, " Morals and Dogmas," page 328 et seq, where he 
positively states that, " We use the old allegories, based on occurrences 
detailed in the Hebrew and Christian books, and drawn from the Ancient 
Mysteries of Egypt, Persia, India, Greece, the Druids and the Essenes, 
as vehicles to communicate the Great Masonic Truths ; as it has used 
the legends of the Crusades, and the ceremonies of orders of Knighthood. 

" The Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Masonry has now 
become what Masonry was at first meant to be, a teacher of Great Truths, 
inspired by an upright and enlightened reason, a firm and constant 
wisdom, and an affectionate and liberal philanthrophy. 

" We teach the truth of none of the legends we recite. They are to 
us but parables and allegories, involving and enveloping Masonic instruc- 
tion ; and vehicles of useful and interesting information. They represent 
the phases of the human mind, its efibrts and struggles to comprehend 
nature, God, the government of the universe, the permitted existence of 
sorrow and evil. To teach us wisdom, and the folly of endeavoring to^ 
explain to ourselves that which we are not capable of understanding, we 
reproduce the speculations of the Philosophers, the Kabalists, the Mysta- 
gogues and the Gnostics. Everyone being at liberty to apply our sym- 
bols and emblems as he thinks most consistent with truth and reason, 
and with his own faith. We give them such interpretation only as may 
be accepted by all. Our degrees may be conferred in France, or Turkey, 
at Pekin, Ispahan, Rome, or Geneva, in the city of Penn, or in Catholic 
Lousiana, upon the subjects of an absolute government or the citizens of 
a free State, upon sectarian or theist. To honor the Diety, to regard all 

men as our brethren, as children, equally dear to him, of the Supreme 
LefC. 



100 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

Creator of the lTniver.se, and to make himself iisefnl to society and 
himself In" his labors, are its teachings to its initiates in all of the 
degrees. 

" Preacher of Liberty, Fraternity and Equality, it desires them to 
be attained by making men fit to receive them, and b}' the moral 
power of an intelligent and enlightened people. It lays no plots and 
conspiracies. It hatches iu> premature revolutions. It encourages no 
people to revolt against the constituted authorities ; but recognizing the 
great truth that freedom follows iitness for freedom, as the corollary 
follows the axiom, it strives to f^rcf^arc men to govern themselves. 

" Except as mere symbols (>[ tlie moral virtues and intellectiuil qiuili- 
ties, the tools and implements of Masonry belong exclusively to the first 
three degrees. They also, however, serve to remind the Alason who has 
advanced further, that his new rank is based ixpon the humble labors of 
the symbolic degrees, as the}' are improperly termed, inasmuch as all 
the degrees are symbolic. 

" Thus the initiates are inspired with a just idea of Masonrj-, to wit, 
that it is essentially woRi^ ; both teaching and practising i<.-\noR ; and that 
it is altogether emblematic. Three kinds of work are necessarj' to the 
preservation and protection of man and societv ; manual labor, specially 
belonging to the three blue degrees ; labor in arms, symbolized hy the 
knightly or chivalric degrees ; and intellectual labor, belonging particu- 
larl)- to the philosopical degrees. 

" There was a distinction between the lesser and gTeater mysteries. 
One must have been for some j-ears admitted to the former before he 
could receive the latter, which was but a preparation for them, the 
Vestibule of the Temple, of which those of Eleusis was the sanctuary. 
There, in the lesser m5'steries, the)- were prepared to receive the holy 
truths in the greater. The initiates in the lesser were called simpl}' 
A/rs/cs, or initiates ; but those in the greater, Ji/>o/>/is, or seers. An 
ancient poet saj's that the former was an imperfect shadow of the latter, 
as sleep is of death. After admission to the former, the initiate was 
taught lessons of morality, and the rudiments of the sacred science, the 
most sitblime and secret part of which was reserved for the Epopt, who 
saw the truth in its nakedness, while the AI}-stes only ^■iewed it through 
a veil and under emblems fitter to excite than to satisfv his curiositv. 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 101 

" Before communicating the first secrets and primary dogmas of 
initiation the priests required the candidate to take a fearful oath never to 
divulge the secrets. Then he made his vows, prayers and sacrifices to 
the gods. The skins of the victims consecrated to Jupiter were spread on 
the ground, and he was made to set his feet upon them. He was then 
taught some enigmatic formulas, as answers to questions, by which 
to make himself known. He was then enthroned, invested with 
a purple cincture, and crowned with flowers, or branches of palms or 
olive." 

Our very learned and ancient Brother Pythagoras divided his schools 
into two classes, to whom he gave instruction, both day and night. To 
those attending his day class, his lectures or teachings were to admonish 
his pupils as to the path they should follow, in order to acquire a 
knowledge of morality, virtue and truth, as well as continually warning 
them of their lower nature, and instructing them how to kill the animal 
within themselves, so as to allow the higher spiritual to dominate and 
guide him. Those who attended his night class were selected from the 
pupils who had proved themselves by earnest study and profound medi- 
tation, to be worthy and well qualified to live in union with a community 
who enjoyed a common property. These he instructed b}' allegories and 
symbols. The emblems used were taken from geometrical and numerical 
figures, believing that, " Number lies at the root of manifest universe. 
Numbers and harmonious proportion guide the first differentiation of 
homogeneous substance into heterogenous elements ; and number and 
numbers set limits to the formative hand of nature. Know the corres- 
ponding numbers of the fundamental principle of every element, and its 
sub-elements ; learn their interaction and behaviour on the occult side 
of manifesting nature, and the law of correspondences will lead you to 
the discovery of the greatest mysteries of macrocosmical life." [Secret 
Doctrine.) 

After the pupil had thoroughly mastered and comprehended the 
primary instructions, he was then advanced to another plane of thought, 
and instructed in the profound, sublime teachings of the Secret 
Doctrine, that fountain of Ancient Wisdom, wherein he learned that 
man is not the highest being in Nature's evolutionary process; but 
that he has within him the potentiality of becoming so. 



102 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

We learn from Clement of Alexandria that — " The Egyptians 
neither entrusted their mysteries to everyone, nor degraded the secrets 
of divine matters by disclosing them to the profane, reserving them for 
the heir apparent of the throne, and for such of the priests as excelled 
in virtue and wisdom." 

Wilkinson, commenting on this, in " Ancient Egyptians," Vol. I, 
page 174, says: "From all we can learn of the subject, it appears 
that the Mj'steries consisted of two degrees, demonstrated the greater 
and the less, and in order to become qualified for admission into the 
higher class, it was necessary to have passed through those of the inferior 
degree, as each of them were probably divided into ten different grades. 
It was necessary that the character of the candidate for initiation should 
be pure and unsullied, and novitiates were commanded to study those 
things which tended to purify the mind and encourage morality. The 
honor of ascending from the less to the greater mysteries, was as highly 
esteemed, as it was difficult to attain. No ordinary qualifications recom- 
mended the aspirant to this important privilege and independent of 
enjoying an acknowledged reputation for learning and morality, he was 
required to undergo the most severe ordeal and to show the greatest 
moral resignation ; but the ceremony of passing under the knife of the 
Hierophant was merely emblematic of the regeneration of the Neophyte. 
That no one, except the priests, was privileged to initiation into the 
greater m3'steries, is evident from the fact of a prince, and even the 
heir-apparent, if of the military order, neither being made partakers of 
those important secrets, nor instructed in them, until his accession to the 
throne, when in virtue of his kinglj^ office he became a member of the 
priesthood and the head of the religion. It is not, however, less certain 
that at a later period many besides the priests and even some Greeks 
were admitted to the lesser mysteries ; yet in these cases also their 
advancement through the different grades must have depended on a strict 
conformance to prescribed rules." 

J. Septimius Florens Tertullianus. a pagan philosopher, who after- 
wards embraced Christianity, and flourished about A. D. 196, was an able 
writer and in his " Apology for ilic Christians^'' sa3'S : " None are admitted 
to the religious mysteries without an oath of secrec}-. We appeal to 3"our 
Thracian and Elusinian mysteries, and we are specially bound to this 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 103 

caution, because if we prove faithless we should not onl}^ provoke Heaven, 
but draw upon our heads the utmost rigor of human displeasure. And 
should strangers betray us ? They know nothing but by report and 
hearsay. Far hence, ye Profane, is the prohibition from all holy 
mysteries." 

Clemens of Alexandria tells us in his " Stromata^^ that " he cannot 
explain the mysteries, because he should thereby, according to the old 
proverb, put a sword into the hands of a child." He frequently compares 
the discipline of the Secret with the heathen Mysteries, as to their 
internal and recondite wisdom. 

Origen, a celebrated Greek writer, surnamed Adamantus^ a rigid 
Christian who made himself a eunuch, tells us that " Inasmuch as the 
essential and important doctrines and principles of Christianity are openly 
taught, it is foolish to object that there are other things that are recon- 
dite ; for this is common to Christian discipline with that of those 
philosophers in whose teachings some things were exoteric, and some 
esoteric." It is enough to say that it was so with some of the disciples 
of Pj'thagoras, and he, like Tertullian, informs us that, just before the 
church opened in regular form, those present were warned in the follow- 
ing words : " Depart ye Profane ! Let the Catechumens and those who 
have not been admitted or initiated go forth." 

Cyrillus, Bishop of Jerusalem, informs us that " The Lord spake 
in parables to his hearers in general ; but to liis disciples he explained 
in private the parables and allegories which he spoke in public. The 
splendor of glory is for those who are earl}^ enlightened ; obscurity and 
darkness are the portion of the unbelievers and ignorant. Just so the 
church discovers its mysteries to those who have advanced beyond the 
class of Catechumens ; we emplo}' obscure terms with others." 

Ambrosius, Bishop of Alilan, who compelled the Emperor Theo- 
dosius to do penance for the murder of the people of' Thessalonica, tells 
us in his " de Officis " that " All the mystery should be kept concealed, 
guarded b}' faithful silence, lest it should be inconsiderate^ divulged 

to the ears of the profane It is not given to all to contemplate 

the depths of our mysteries that they may not be seen by those 

who ought not to behold them ; nor received by those who cannot pre- 
serve them He sins against God who divulges to the unworthy 



104 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

tlie mysteries confided to him. Tlie danger is not merely in violating 
truth^ but in telling trutli, if lie allows himself to give hints of them to 

those from whom they ought to be concealed Beware of casting 

pearls before swine ! Every mystery ought to be kept secret, and 

as it were, to be covered over by silence, lest it should be rashly divulged 
to the ear of the profane." 

Brother Pike, in " Morals and Dogmas," page 624, says, " In the 
mysteries, wherever they were practiced, was taught that truth of the 
primitive revelation, the existence of One Great Being, infinite and 
prevading the universe, who was there worshipped without superstition ; 
and his marvellous nature, essence and attributes taught to the initiates, 
while the vulgar attributed his works to secondary gods, personified and 
isolated from Him in fabulous independence. 

" These truths were covered from the common people as with a veil, 
and the mysteries were carried into every country, that, without disturb- 
ing the popular beliefs, truth, the arts and the sciences might be known 
to those who were capable of understanding them, and maintaining the 
true doctrine incorrupt ; which the people, prone to superstition and 
idolatry, have in no age been able to do ; nor, as many strange aberra- 
tions and superstitions of the present day prove, any more now than 
heretofore. For we need but point to the doctrines of so many sects 
that degrade the Creator to the rank, and assign to Him the passions 
of humanity, to prove that now, as always, the old truths must be com- 
mitted to a few, or they will be overlaid with fiction and error and 
irretrievably lost. 

" Though Masonry is identical with the ancient mysteries, it is so 
in this qualified sense : that it presents but an imperfect image of their 
brilliancy ; the ruins only of their grandeur, and a system that has 
experienced progressive alterations, the fruits of social events and 
political circumstances." 

Augustinus,, Bishop of Hippo, in Africa, was a celebrated writer of 
his age. He died in the seventy-sixth year of his age, A. D. 430. He 
tells us that " Having dismissed the catechumens, we have retained you 
only to be our hearers, because, besides those things which belong to 
all Christians in common, we are now to discourse to you of sublime 
mysteries, which none are qualified to hear, but those who by the 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 105 

Master's favor are made partakers of them To have taught 

them openly would have been to betra}' them." 

Chrysostom, a Bishop of Constantinople, died in A. D. 407, in his 
fifty-third year. He was a very great disciplinarian and made himself 
many enemies by preaching against the vices of the people. He was 
banished b}^ the empress for opposing the raising of a statue to her. He 
was a truly good man, and in his writings says, " I wish to speak 
openl}^ ; but I dare not, on account of those not initiated. I shall there- 
fore avail myself of disguised terms, discoursing in a shadowy manner. 

Where the holy mysteries are celebrated we drive away all 

unitiated persons and then close the doors." He also informs us, 
respecting the acclamations of the initiated, that he " will pass them over 
in silence ; for it is forbidden to disclose such things to the profane." 

Basilius, a celebrated Bishop of Africa, was a very eloquent orator, 
who died in his iifty-first year, A. D. 379. He informs us that, "We 
receive the dogmas transmitted to us by writing and those which have 
descended to us from the Apostles, beneath the mysteries of oral 
tradition ; for several things have been handed to us without writing, 
lest the vulgar, too familiar with our dogmas, should lose a due respect 
for them This is what the uninitiated are not permitted to con- 
template, and how should it ever be proper to write and circulate among 
the people an account of them ? " 

I have made various quotations to verify my own assertions as to 
the mysteries having a common origin and being the original source and 
depositor}^ of those pure Theosophical and Philosophical truths that are 
to be found in all religions, all philosophies, and all science. That in 
ever}' epoch of the world's history- these sublime and profound teachings 
have alwa^'s existed. I want to show the intimate relation between the 
esoteric truths and teachings of our own beloved Scottish Rite of Free- 
masonry, with the mysteries of ancient India. From this source ramified 
all the other mj'steries, through those of the Mazdean, Egyptian, Orphic, 
Cabirian, Samothracian, Elusinian, Sidonian, Dionysian, P3rthagorean, 
Druids, Christian, Basilidean, etc. Every intelligent Masonic student will 
recognize the connecting links between the ancient wisdom of India and 
the Theosophical and Philosophical esoteric teaching of Scottish Masonry; 
but he must not expect to find a regular, unbroken chain of evidence 



106 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

running down from the hoary civilization of prehistoric ages to the 
present daj'. He will be enabled to trace the links in regular inter- 
rupted lines of transmission, and though interrupted the proof of their 
continued existence will be most assuredly unmistakable, as the thread 
which connects it wall mark its descent from age to age, until we find 
it in all its sublimity and grandeur echoing through the temples 
of otir own beloved Scottish Rite of Masonry, as it did in those of 
India, in the cave temples of Mazdean Hierophants, and the temples and 
pyramids of ancient Egypt, back to the dawn of time. These glorious 
truths and teachings which illuminated the path and mind of the 
aspirant in the hoary ages of the past, have descended to us from the 
" Land of the Vedas," and it demonstrates to the Neophyte of to-day the 
same grand sj^stem of philosophy. The self-same teachings that were 
concealed in the lesser and the greater mysteries are now taught and 
used in this glorious rite of ours, for the same purpose and in the same 
manner as in the civilization of the far away past. 

Ah ! how magnificent and impressive must have been the ceremonies 
of the ancient Egyptians in their stupendous temples ! What transition 
from sorrow to joy! Light wandering in darkness, bereft of all save 
Hope, and the Light of Truth, carried deep down within the heart of 
every man ; even passing through the very shadow of death, pondering 
upon the threshold of the tomb, battling for very life ; wandering 
through weary wastes of desert, seeking for Light through cavernous 
depths ; but ever rising above Ignorance, Tyranny and Fanaticism into 
the realm of the highest degree of intellectual knowledge and perfection. 

This most profound Theosophical Philosophy and science is written 
in symbols and veiled in such a manner, that only those Elus, Masters 
and Adepts, who have seen the Light, are enabled to interpret or explain 
the true meaning of them, as they were and are used for the purpose of 
concealing the profound and sublime teachings of the Ancient Wisdom, 
instead of revealing. In fact, as I have heretofore stated in 1;he early part 
of this work, that ^^ Masonry is a pecidiar system of Morality, veiled in 
Allegory and illustrated by Symbols^ In the ancient da3rs these alle- 
gories and symbols were most carefully guarded from the Profane, and 
people who had not seen the Light, were never permitted to cross the 
threshold of the temples, wherein was practiced the secret teachings of 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 107 

the ancient mysteries. Chrysostom, in his letter to Pope Innocent, 
informing him that on account of his opposing the empress, he excited 
quite a number of the people against him, who forced " their \\a.y into 
the most secret parts of the temple, even into the inner sanctuary, and 
there saw what was not proper for them to behold." But they could not 
have understood the meaning of the things the}'' had seen, no more than 
the uninitiated could, of the symbology of our own beloved Rite. In fact, 
some of our Initiates themselves do not understand the meaning of many 
of the symbols revealed to them, simply because they are looking bej'ond, 
instead of at, what lies before them. I am ver}' sorr}' to say that just as 
soon as our aspiring candidate receives his Morals and Dogmas, he turns 
on toward the end, instead of the beginning, and is thus retarded in his 
comprehension of the glories pertaining to our philosophy. 

No one was allowed to enter the portals of the ancient mysteries 
for initiation who was not Just, Upright and True, and possessed of a ^ 

good moral character, who had been heard of " under the tongue of good 
report." They did not depend eutirel}^ upon the report or reputation ; 
but rather upon the true character of the man who sought initiation. 
The wise and good of all nations and peoples were allowed to enter into 
and receive the "Light " of initiation, irrespective of creed, caste or color, 
because the Universal Brotherhood of Man was one of the iirst things 
taught the Neophyte. Neither rank nor power would opeu the gates for 
initiation, to a.ny man, unless he was found worthy and well qualified. 
The pre-requisite was to be, JusT, Upright and True to all men. If he 
was found possessed of these requisites he was permitted to cross the 
threshold ; but before he could advance, from one degree to another, he 
Avould have to be well versed in the esoteric teachings of the preceding 
degrees, as well as the sjaubolic meaning of the various emblems pre- 
sented to him for inspection. Not until he had made suitable proficiency 
in the lesser, was he allowed to proceed to the higher and more sublime 
mysteries. 

The Hierophants of ancient Egj^pt were very careful to thoroughly 
investigate the character of the Aspirant before permitting him to drink 
from the Sacred Fount of Ancient Egyptian Wisdom, and when P3'tha- 
goras presented himself for initiation, he underwent the most searching 
investigation, before being allowed to proceed with the initiator}^ cere- 



108 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

monies. Historical records inform us that he displayed the most remark- 
able fortitude and incredible patience, before obtaining the privilege of 
searching through the profound philosophies of the Sacred Science. 
After having done so, like all good men who had preceded him, he 
began to realize the sublimity and grandeur of its profound philosophies. 
One of the ver}' first things taught was that all men were Brothers, and 
part of the Divine Whole. 

When Plutarch endeavored to attain an entrance into the ancient 
mysteries by initiation, the Hierophants requested him to confess every 
wicked act committed during the whole course of his life. These Hiero- 
phants positively knew that initiation into their mysteries would never 
be allowed, nor the initiatory degree conferred upon any one who could 
not prove themselves to be good men and true, moral and virtuous. 
Unless they were able to do this they were not considered worthy of the 
high honor, and the consequence was, the sacred portals were closed 
against them. 

Proclus said that initiation into the m3'steries was so siiblime that 
all those who had been selected to enter into the sacred precincts should 
prove themselves to be virtuous. He also said that, " It drew the souls 
of men from a material, sensual and merely human life, to join them 
in communion with the Gods." 

In the "Book of the Dead," Chapter 125, called "The Hall of the 
Two Truths," the soul, in passing through Amenti, thus addresses the 
Lords of Truth : " I have not afflicted any. I have not told falsehoods. 
I have not made the laboring man do more than his task. I have not 
been idle. I have not murdered. I have not committed fraud. I have 
not injured the images of the Gods. I have not taken scraps of the 
bandages of the dead. I have not committed adultery. I have not 
cheated b}' false weights." Again he goes on to confess, saying: " That 
he has loved God, that he has given bread to the hungr}' and water 
to the thirsty, garments to the naked and a home to the homeless."' 
This examination, herein related, was no doubt the key to the examina- 
tion which the candidate had to pass through before being accepted 
and allowed to pass between the columns and enter the sacred portals 
of the Egyptian Mj^steries. We can now thoroughly understand liow 
difficult it was to obtain admission into the Mysteries, and wh}- it was 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 109 

that tlie Hierophant was so searching in his questions, not permitting 
any one to take even the initiatory degrees who were not thoroughly 
virtuous, free from sin and vice. Minor offences were, no doubt, purged 
and purified during the initiatory services by passing through certain 
ceremonies atid in being baptized anezv, and eonsccratcd to RiGHT, Justice 
AND Truth. But to all such applicants as Constantine, Nero, and 
man}' others, the gates of the sublime Mysteries were forever closed, 
on account of their awful crimes, which could not be condoned. 

The principal object of initiation was to instruct and assist the 
Neoph3'te in his search for " Light." As I have previously stated, 
" Light " meant Wisdom, Knowledge and Information. It is that 
knowledge which leads us all to a comprehension of the Divine Prin- 
ciple, the Supreme Essence, the source of all Life^ ^^g^'l (I'ld Love. 
It taught the Initiate to thoroughl}' understand himself, and the 
potential forces latent within him. It also teaches him that as his 
moral, intellectual and spiritual nature develops he will be far better 
enabled to consciousl}' know the intents and purposes of human life. In 
consequence of this he becomes more earnest and eager to help accom- 
plish that purpose in his own person, hy practicing LovE and SELFLESS- 
NESS. In loving his neighbor as himself and giving up the avaricious, 
grasping desire of self gratification. 

The instructions received were not only on Nature and Man ; but 
all the various phenomena emanating from the unseen world, as well 
as in comprehending the Occult science. He would understand that 
what is seen is not the realit}', but only the manifestation of the 
unseen, which is the realit}'. The noiniicnoii. He was taught that the 
director of the Mind, the Higher Self, was the true Inunortal Man, the 
real /that continuall}- clothes itself with various personalities which live, 
and die, and pass away with each and every one. But, the true man., the 
Immortal " Thinker^'' lives through all and endures for ever. " We are 
all of us conscious that the individual, as we see him with our e3'es and 
perceive with our bodil}- senses, is not the actual personalit}-. If he 
should fall dead in our presence, there would still be a body to look upon 
as distinctly as before. But the something has gone forth which had 
imparted sensibilitj^ to the nerves and impulse to the muscles. That 
something was the real individual. It accompanied the body, but has 



110 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

departed, leaving it behind." The " He " or " She " has thus given place 
to " /A" 

We witness pheno^nena and may now ask to learn the nonmena. 
("A Wilder.") The " voice of tJic real man comes to him by a process as 
direct and swift as bodily vision, or the sense of feeling, and this voice 
which never deceives him is Intuition.''^ 

Masonic Knowledge is the highest and most sacred deposit that has 
come down to us from the ancient days of Egyptian splendor and 
beyond. It is the most sacred and profound Wisdom of human life and 
experience, because it helps man to understand the presence of a mys- 
terious and inscrutable Power, the knowledge of which thrills him to 
the very centre of his being, and calls into existence the susceptibilities 
and faculties which appropriates knowledge gained along these lines for 
the upbuilding of his Higher Se/f, so that he may eventually attain to 
perfect wisdom and become at one with the Power that permeates the 
Kosmos. There is no question in my mind but that the problem of Life 
was a study for the candidate as well as Death and Reincarnation. 

I quite agree with Brother J. D. Buck, 32°, in his " Mystic 
Masonry," page 51, wherein he says: "In the Ancient Mysteries, 
Life presented itself to the candidate as a problem to be solved, 
and not as certain propositions to be memorized, and as easily forgotten. 
The solution of this problem constituted all genuine initiation, and at 
every step or ' degree ' the problem expanded. As the vision of the 
candidate enlarged in relation to the problems and meaning of life, his 
powers of apprehension and assimilation also increased proportionately. 
This was also an evolution. It may reasonably be supposed that the 
lower degrees of such initiation concerned the ordinary affairs of life, I'iz ; 
a knowledge of the laws and processes of external nature ; the candidate's 
relation to these, through his physical body, and his relations on the 
physical plane, through his animal senses, and social instincts, to his 
fellow-men. These matters being learned, adjusted. Mastered; the candi- 
date passed to the next degree. Here he learned, theoretically, at first, 
the nature of the soul ; the process of its evolution, and began to unfold 
those finer instincts. If he was found capable of apprehending these, and 
kept his ' vow ' in the preceding degree, he presently discovered the evo- 
lution within him of senses and falculties pertaining to the ' soul-plane.' 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. Ill 

His progress avouM -be instantly arrested, and his teacher would refuse all 
further instruction, if he was found negligent of the ordinary duties of 
life ; those to his family, his neighbors, or his country. All these must 
have been fully discharged before he could stand upon the threshold as 
a candidate for the Greater Mysteries ; for in these he became an unselfish 
Servant of Humanity as a whole ; and had no longer the right to bestow 
the gifts of knowledge or power that he possessed, upon his own kinsmen, 
or friends, in preference to strangers. In the higher degrees, he might 
be precluded from using these powers even to preserve his own life. 
Both the Master and his Powers belong to Humanity. If the reader wdll 
but reflect for a moment, how the tantalizing Jews called upon Jesus to 
'save himself and come down from the cross,' if he were the Christ, it 
may be seen that this doctrine of Supreme Selflessness ought, long ago, 
to have been better apprehended by the Christian world ; for while it is 
a Divine Attribute, the Synonym of the Christ, it is latent in all human- 
ity and must be evolved as herein described. 

" That which makes such an evolution seem to modern readers 
impossible, is, that it can not be conceived as being accomplished in a 
single life, nor can it be. It is the result of persistent effort, guided by / 

high ideals, through many lives. Those who deny Pre-existence may 
logically deny all such evolution. There must, however, come a time 
when all the consummation is reached in one life, and this is the logical 
meaning of the saying of Jesus — It Is Finished." 

There is no question but the Mysteries, the Ancient Wisdom, and 
the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry exists for the express purpose of 
teaching man to understand himself; the attributes of Life and its 
Forces ; the soul and its attributes. Thought, Will, and Cognition, and 
Death and its meaning. It teaches us that every object in the manifested 
universe, even the tiniest atom that floats in the sunshine, has a soul 
within itself. This soul with Matter and Spirit, forms the Trinity which 
comprises Unity. It is this Soul, Energy, Force or vibration that causes 
every atom to float in the sunlit ray and manifests that Force b}? its own 
individual energy or motion. In fact, it is this Force within itself, which 
produces motion, and is contained in all bodies animate or inanimate. It 
is known to the Masters and Adepts as the Incarnation of the Force. 
This is a Universal Law. 



112 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Look around you, in every direction, and you will perceive that 
Force, Type, Idea, is ever changing, manifesting itself again and again in 
varying phases. In this way it is continually evolving into higher forms 
of development. Energy or Force is never annihilated, but continues its 
protean appearance, clothed in various garbs ; yet still moving onward in 
its upward march, ever finding variant forms with which to express or 
manifest itself. The self-same law applies to all Kingdoms ; but more 
especially to the Human Kingdom. Man being a part and parcel of the 
Divine Whole, cannot be separated from it no more than the tiniest grain 
of sand upon the sea-shore, without disturbing the Equilibrium of the 
Balance, and the Kosmos with it. Therefore human Energy, Force, or 
Soul, continually reincarnates, in order to grow and attain spiritual 
perfection and Wisdom, such as was reached by the Master and Adept, 
Jesus of Nazareth — The Christ. The Atliarva Veda says " Nothing is 
commenced or ended. Everything is changed or transformed. Life and 
Death are only modes of transformation which rule the vital molecules, 
from the plant up to Brahma himself." The Atharva-veda is one of 
the sacred books of the Hindus and of great antiquity. 

In speaking of India and her sacred writings I am reminded of the 
many happ}^ years spent in that extraordinary country, studying the 
manners and customs of the people. I travelled from Calcutta to Bombay, 
not by cars alone, but by regular " Dak gharreh," and after leaving Moul- 
tan, by the steamer, down the river Indus and cars to Khurrachee, from 
thence by steamer to Bombay. I stopped at all the principal cities en route 
and while writing of the Ancient Mysteries and their teachings, memory 
carried me back to the celebrated cave temples in the immediate vicinity 
of Bombay, and especially to the Cave Temple of Elephanta, with its 
wonderful Trimurti. 

" I am all in all " says the Trinitariun inscription in this ancient 
Temple, which is situated on the island of Elephanta, about four or five 
miles from Mazagong, a suburb of Bombay, where boats can be secured 
to take you across to the island. From the landing place up on the 
beach you can make the ascent by stone steps, winding their way up to 
the entrance, which is located about midway on the hillside from the 
beach. Here we found a level space fronting the entrance of the cave. 
On entering we found ourselves in a large hall, about one hundred and 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 113 

fifty feet long, by eighty feet wide, with four rows of very strong massive 
columns at regular distances, forming three avenues leading to the 
extreme end of the hall. The cave has been cut right into the face of 
the solid rock. There are halls or rooms, of much smaller dimensions, 
opening into the larger hall from each side of it. Very fine carvings 
beautify and adorn the large and massive pillars of the rock, left to 
support the tremendous weight of the mountain above, forming the roof. 
These pillars or columns are eighteen feet high, and have a majestic 
appearance ; in fact, everything here will have a tendency to surprise the 
traveller and fill him with awe and admiration. The ceiling or roof is 
flat, with very fine imitations of architraves running from column to 
column. These pillars differ entirely from the variant orders of Greece 
and Rome, in their peculiar shape, yet such columns seem to be quite in 
keeping with their surroundings, and very appropriate to their function, 
reminding one of the more massive pillars of ancient Egypt. 

I saw here a large number of carvings relative to Hindu mythology, 
and one chamber with the Lingham and Yoni. Another small temple 
had a different style of columns, the walls adorned with sculptures, 
while the roof and cornice were ornamented with painted mosaic patterns, 
still bright with various colors. But the most striking, remarkable and 
artistically carved figures, are situated at the extreme end of the middle 
row of columns, in the large hall. It is the Trinuirti., or triune god. 
representing Brahma, Vishnu and Siva united in one body. It is 
eighteen feet high. These figures represent the Creator, Preserver and 
Destro3'er — Evolution^ Involution, and Brahma, the container of both — 
the whole surrounded b}^ minor figures cut deep into the solid rock. 
This trinity represents Brahma, the incomprehensible and infinite god, 
the substratum of all Being, just dawning into multiple existence — 
permitting himself to be seen in his first conceivable form. In this 
trinity VisJuui represents the idea of Evolution — the process by which 
the inner spirit unfolds and generates the universe of sensible forms. 
Siva represents the idea rnvolution, by which the thought and the sensi- 
ble universe are indrawn again into the unmanifested ; and Brahma 
represents that state which is neither Evolution nor Invohttion — and 3'et 
is both — existence itself, now first brought into the region of thought 
through relation to Vishnu and Siva. Each figure has its hand turned 



114 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

upwards, resting upou the base of tlie ueck, holdiug au emblem : Vislmu 
the Lotus flower of generation, Brahma the gourd of fruition, and Siva 
the " good snake," ///e cobra dc cappcllo^ whose bite is certain death. 
The faces of Vishnu and Brahma are mild and serene, while the features 
of Siva are peculiarly characteristic of her destroying propensities and 
attributes. Siva also has the third eye — the eye of the interior vision of 
the universe, a vision that comes to the man who adopts the method of 
involution. This eye is situated in the Pineal gland and lies surrounded 
by the Nates, Velum Interpositum, Optic Thalmus, and the Third and 
Fourth Ventricle. 

The ancient Egyptian and Hindu Hierophants never admitted a 
creation out of nothing, but, as Herbert Spencer says, " an evolution by 
gradual stages of the heterogeneous and differentiated, from the homo- 
geneous and undifferentiated." No mind can comprehend the Infinite 
and Absolute unknown, which has no beginning and shall have no end; 
which is both last and first, because, whether differentiated or withdrawn 
into itself, it ever is. All things emanate from a single Principle, a 
Primal source, which is the governing Force or Energy. The Moving 
Power which vibrates through all and controls all is Lifc^ Motion^ 
Vibration^ Hanuoiiy. It is That which permeates all, governing and 
controlling everj^thing in the Kosmos, Manifested or Unmauifested. It 
ever is, it ever will be. 

Albert Pike, in " Morals and Dogmas," page 517, ct scq^ sa3^s, in 
speaking of the doctrine of the immortalit}^ of the soul, that " Egypt and 
Ethiopia in these matters learned from India, where, as everywhere else, 
the origin of the doctrine was as remote and untraceable as the origin of 
man himself Its natural expression is found in the language of 
Krishna, in the BaJigavad Gita. I mj^self never was non-existent, nor 
thou, nor these princes of the Earth ; uor shall we ever hereafter cease to 
be. . . . The soul is uot a thing of which a man may say, it hath been, or 
is about to be, or is to be hereafter ; for it is a thing without birth ; it is 
pre-existent, changeless, eternal, and not to be destro3^ed with this mortal 
frame. According to the dogma of antiquity, the thronging forms nf life 
are a series of purifying migrations, through which the Divine Principle 
reascends to the unity of its source. Inebriated in the bowl of Dionusos, 
and dazzled in the mirror of existence, the souls, those fragments or 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 115 

sparks of Universal Intelligence, forgot their native dignity and passed 
into terrestrial frames they coveted. The most usual ty^& of the spirit's 
descent was suggested by the sinking of the Sun and Stars from the 
upper to the lower hemisphere. When it arrived within the portals 
of the proper empire of Dionusos, the God of this World, the scene of 
delusion and change, its individuality became clothed in a material form, 
and as individual bodies were compared to a garment, the World was the 
investiture of the Universal Spirit. 

" In the course of Nature the Soul, to recover its lost estate, must 
pass through a series of trials and migrations. The scene of those trials 
is the Grand vSanctuary of Initiation, the world. Their primary agents 
are the elements and Dionusos, as Sovereign of Nature, or the sensous 
world personified, is official Arbiter of the Mysteries, and guide of the 
soul, which he introduces into the body and dismisses from it. He is 
the Sun, that liberator of the elements, and his spiritual mediation was 
suggested by the same imagery which made the zodiac the supposed path 
of the spirits in their descent and their return, and Cancer and Capricorn 
the gates through which they passed. 

" Thus the scientific theories of the ancients expounded in the 
mysteries, as to the origin of the soul, its descent, its sojourn here below, 
and its return, were not a mere barren contemplation of the nature of the 
world, and about the soul, but a study of the means for arriving at the 
great object proposed — the perfecting of the soul ; and as a necessary 
consequence, that of morals and society. This earth to them was not 
the soul's home, but its place of exile. Heaven was its home, and there 
was its birthplace. To it, it ought incessantly to turn its eyes. Man 
was not a terrestrial plant. His roots were in Heaven. The soul had 
lost its wings, clogged by the viscosity of matter. It would recover them 
when it extricated itself from matter and commenced its upward flight. 

" Matter being in their view, as it was in that of St. Paul, the 
principle of all the passions that trouble reason, mislead the intelligence, 
and stain the purity of the soul, the Mysteries taught man how to 
enfeeble the action of the matter on the soul, and to restore to the latter 
its natural dominion, and that the stains so contracted should continue 
after death, lustrations were used, fastings, expiations, macerations, con- 
tinence, and above all, initiations. Many of these practices were at first 



116 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

merely symbolical, — Material signs indicating the moral purity required 
of the initiates, but they afterwards came to be regarded as actual pro- 
ductive causes of that purity. 

" The effect of initiation was meant to be the same as that of 
•ohilosophy, to purify the soul of its passions, to weaken the empire of 
the body over the Divine portion of man, and to give him here below a 
happiness anticipatory of the felicity to be one day enjoyed by him, and 
of the future vision by him of the Divine Beings. And therefore Proclus 
and the other Platonists taught — ' that the mysteries and initiations 
withdrew souls from this mortal and material life, to re-unite them to 
the gods, and dissipated for the adepts the shades of ignorance by the 
splendors of the Deity.' Such were the precious fruits of the last degree 
of the Mystic Science — to see Nature in her springs and sources, and to 
become familiar with the causes of things and with real existences. 

" Cicero tells us that ' The soul must exercise itself in the practice 
of the virtues, if it would speedil}' return to its place of origin. It should, 
while imprisoned in the body, free itself therefrom by the contemplation 
of superior beings, and in some sort be divorced from the body and the 
senses. Those who remain enslaved, subjugated by their passions, and 
violating the sacred laws of religion and society will reascend to Heaven, 
only after they shall have been purified through a long succession of 
ages. The initiate was required to emancipate himself from his passions, 
and to free himself from the hindrances of the senses of matter, in order 
that he might rise to the contemplation of the Deity, or of that incor- 
poreal and unchanging light in which live and subsist the causes of 
created natures.' Porph3^ry distinctly informs us that we must ' flee 
from everything sensual, that the soul may with ease reunite itself with 
God, and live happil}' wdth Him.' 

"The object and aim of Initiation, Hierocles tells us, is 'To recall 
the soul to what is truly good and beautiful, and make it familiar there- 
with, and they its own. To deliver it from the pains and ills it endures 
here below, enchained in matter, as in a dark prison ; to facilitate its 
return to the celestial splendors and to establish it in the fortunate isles 
b}' restoring it to its first estate. Thereby, when the hour of death arrives, 
the soul, freed from its mortal garmenting, which it leaves behind it, as a 
legacy to earth, will rise buoj'antly to its home among the Stars, there to 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 117 

retake its ancient condition, and approach toward the Divine nature as 
far as man ma}^ do.' " 

This evolution of the soul has ever been a source of stud}^ in all 
ages and through all time. It is one of the most profound and sublime 
problems handed down to us from the Ancient Mysteries of India. It 
requires deep and earnest meditation on the part of the Initiate, in order 
that he may be enabled to trace // through variant molecular forms, to 
states of consciousness in the mind of man. Of course there is a con- 
sciousness in all things, and this consciousness varies in all the varying 
forms in the Kosmos. In tracing it through the various kingdoms, so as 
to come to an understanding of consciousness, we must carefully note 
that before plant life could exist upon the face of the earth the very 
Rocks and Stones would have to disintegrate, surrendering their lives for 
the purpose of building up higher forms to a higher grade or plane of 
intelligence, for though we may not recognize it, there is a consciousness 
hid deep within their stou}' covering. Everything in the Kosmos,. 
throughout all kingdoms, is conscious, /. <?., dowered with a consciousness 
peculiarly its own, and on its own plane of perception. We must not say 
that there is no consciousness in either mineral or vegetable, because we 
are unable to perceive any. ''There is no such thing as dead or blind 
matter, as there is no blind or unconscious law." By the disintegration 
of the molecular form of the mineral, life leaps forth into a higher stage 
of development, awakening to a new birth, a new revelation, and a new 
vibration of harmony fitted to its new conditions, rejoicing in its free- 
dom, thus demonstrating the first evolution and the first law of self- 
sacrifice. Before this disintegration of the Rock or Stone we may not 
cognize either sound or motion within its stony heart ; because, it is, as 
it were, sleeping, lying dormant, awaiting the magic touch of Dionusos 
to transform it into a higher form, and possibl}^ into a di^erent kingdom; 
for out of the very dust of the earth comes man himself, the head of the 
animal kingdom, and from the ver}^ self same st2iff comes plant-life 
in the vegetable kingdom, with consciousness and feeling more full}^ 
developed. No one can deny this fact! 

Do you mean to tell me that in plucking a rose from its bush 
it suffers no pain ? Do you not see the very life-blood of the plant 
ooze forth from the fracture ? Because yon do not see any signs of 



118 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

consciousness, does that prove that it has none? I tell you, my dear 
Brother and readers, all nature pulses with Li'fe and Consciousness^ 
and each form manifests as much of the One Life as it is capable of 
expressing. What is Man that he can despise the more limited mani- 
festations, when he compares himself, as life expression, to that which 
soars above him in infinite heights of being, which he can estimate 
still less than the rose can estimate him. 

Bvery flower that blooms, every plant or blade of grass that lifts 
itself into light and sunshine, has its degree of intelligence. Intelli- 
gence is as common as the atmosphere itself, and the onl}^ difference 
is, some forms have more life than others. Spirit precedes time and 
space, builds its own structure, and makes its own environment. The 
unity is so unbroken that the tiniest gnat carries on its back the key 
to the universe. Life, traced to its lowest forms, always discloses 
unity, whether in the stone, the clod of earth, the growing tree, a herd 
of animals, or a host of men, it is the same gift. The universe is a 
single expression of that unity. 

Every star and planet that glitters in the starry vault above is a 
ball of dirt like the earth. The sun has no fuel that our earth can- 
not duplicate ; neither can Saturn, Jupiter or Uranus impose upon us 
with any airs of superiorit3\ A drop of water and a drop of human 
blood have their origin in the same corpuscle. The fungus and the 
oak on which it grows ; the animalcule and the scientist who studies 
it are alike. From out the slime and filth of the cesspool comes forth 
the lil}^ in all its purit}' and splendor. Out from the refuse of the 
stable comes the blush of the rose and its fragrance. Filth and fer- 
tility are the same word. So we climb the evolving ladder, from the 
rock, dust, plant, animal, to man. Out of the lowliest forms man has 
come to be something and he will come to be much more. He is at 
the end of a long series of forms, through whose natural gradations 
he has passed, each stage of which has been toward a higher trans- 
formation. Evolution has forced him up a long ascending wa}-, and 
still pushes him on; for he is j-et bound to the soil, from whence his 
body came, much earthl};- matter loading him down and binding him 
fast to earth-life through his animal nature. In this present stage of 
evolution we are but human animals, parading as men. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 119 

Much of the human structure is a legacy from inferior organisms, 
which, in our next advent, we shall make superfluous. Such are some 
of the esoteric teachings of the Ancient Mysteries. Such thoughts have 
existed from time immemorial, and such thoughts the human mind 
still speculates upon, for they have come down to us from the "Land 
of Gobi," the land of ancient wisdom whose Hierophants ever strived 
to place their Brothers upon the path that led on to a knowledge of 
Birth, Life, Death, and the Evolution of the Soul. 

Birth is the emerging or coming forth from the unmanifested into a 
higher plane of spiritual unfoldment where experience is gained through 
suffering and pain, where Man is refined like gold in the crucible. Life 
is a battle to be fought bj^ INIan, a battle of the spiritual against the 
Material and Sensual, or in other words it is a battle that is continually 
going on between his lower animal passional nature and his Higher 
Spiritual Self DEATH is a transformation, a disintegration of molecular 
form, or a return to the unmanifested universe. The teachings of the 
Sacred Mysteries inform us that '' The Soul of Man is Immortal ; and 
not the result of organization, nor an aggregate of modes of action of 
matter, nor a succession of phenomena and perceptions ; but an Existence^ 
one and identical, a living spirit, a spark of the Great Central Light, that 
hath entered into and dwells in the bod}- ; to be separated therefrom at 
death, and return to God who gave it ; that doth not disperse or vanish at 
death, like breath or a smoke, nor can be annihilated ; but still exists and 
possesses activity and intelligence, even as it existed in God before it was 
enveloped in the body. 



^tiei Canal— El)e IBxusfs, tjeir ilflannns 

anti ©ustonts. 



m 



Ships) arc now pAseing from sca to eca, 
Midst .\ wAStc, of the desert sand; 

Hs in the days of the 6reat Sett, 

Hlhen this pharaoh ruled the land. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 1:^3 



CHAPTER VI. 

SUEZ CANAL— THE DRUSES, THEIR MANNERS AND CUSTOMS. 

^N the opening of the third chapter the attention of my readers was 
ni called to the absurdity of giving to certain men the credit of 
being the promoters and inventors of the early sciences, and 
demonstrated my reasons for so doing. The same may be said of the 
cutting of the canal across the Isthmus of Suez ; it is the height of 
absurdity to give Napoleon credit for having been the first to conceive 
the idea of the project, or the French people, or any other modern 
source, for the simple reason that it had been under contemplation 
fully thirty-four centuries ago. In fact, we have proof positive that 
the two seas were connected b}' a canal or waterway long centuries 
before Christ; consequently the work commenced and completed by 
M. de Lesseps, in cutting a canal between the Mediterranean and Red 
Seas, was no nev/ idea, but rather the completion of a scheme that 
had been in existence in the days of Rameses the Great. Still I do 
not wish to detract, in any way, from the great work as completed by 
this celebrated engineer in the year 1869. I simply wish to state 
that what he, and the workmen under him, accomplished in connect- 
ing the two seas was an old idea, and that the thought of constructing 
such a waterway or canal did not originate in the nineteenth century. 
It had already been accomplished in the hoary ages of the past, in 
the Golden Age of Egyptian splendor. 

The principal and most important idea in the construction of the 
Suez Canal was, first to find the place where the waters of the Medi- 
terranean were the deepest and nearest to the coast of Egypt. After this 
was done, to establish a starting point from that place and make it a 
point of operation. Then to build a town, as close to this point as 
possible, and establish there immense workshops and dwellings for 



l-^ EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

ihf iiK'u c'iiu;;ij;cd in the work of culliiii;' a canal from sea to sea, 
tliroiioli wliieli ships nii};ht be enal)le(l lo pass witli little nr no diffi- 
culty or danger. 

There is no qnestion (hal 1\1. de Lesseps carefully matured his 
])lans as to the mode of procedure in constructing this maritime 
canal. It was a great responsibility to undertake such an immense 
piece of work, bnl M, de Lesseps was just the man needed. When 
IMahomnu'd vSaid I'aslia became Viceroy of Egypt, in 1854, he used 
his ntniost endeavors to carr_\' on the work so ably j)lanned 1)\' his 
fatlu'r, Mohammed Ali. He sent lor M. tie Lesseps in order to con- 
sult him niKin llie possibility of constructing a canal across the 
isthmus, and the best way to proceed about it. The result of this 
interview was that a commission was signed and given to AI. de 
Lesseps, authorixing him to organize a company. The said company 
was to be known as " The Universal Suez Caiud Company," for the 
express ])nrpose of raising funds and pushing the preliminary work 
as rapidl}^ as jiossible ; bnt there were uuiny things which deferred 
the commcnceUKnt of the work. 

In 1X3(1 an International Commission had been organized, with 
representatives from England, France, Prussia, Austria, the Netherlands, 
and Spain. This Commission nuxlified the previous arrangements made, 
by altering the luie originall}' chosen to one a little farther north, so as 
to reach a place where the deep waters of the Mediterranean came closer 
to land. Locks were done awa\- with, and the breakwaters, or jetties 
at each enil of the canal, were slightly i hanged. A iVcsh water canal 
fnnn l>nlak, to convey water for the Tise of the workmen was agreed 
upon, and other minor tlclails settled. The details dragged along slowly, 
and M. tie Lesseps was anxit)us to commence operations; bnt various 
obstacles held him back and compelled him lo " wait and hope." On the 
25th da}' of April, in the year 1S59, a small ditch was cut in the sandy 
spit that separates the waters of the Mediterranean from Lake> Menzala. 
This work was performed in the presence of ]\L de Lesseps and four 
directors of the Company, and may be claimed as the first formal com- 
mencement of the great work. The surveying and selection o( the site, 
as well as marking the place lor the work lo begin, as planned and laid 
(Uit by M. lie Lessep, was performed by I\L Laroche. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 125 

Let me here quote from Murray, rather lliaii depend wyxm my notes 
(page 2S7) : "From the moulli of tlie Damietta branch of tlic Nile to 
the Gulf of Pelusinm there stretches a low belt of sand, varying in 
width from two hundred to three hundred yards, serving to sejiarate the 
Mediterranean from the waters of Lake Menzala ; though often, when 
the lake is full and the waves of the Mediterranean are high, the two 
meet across tlie slight liouudary line. In the beginniug of the montli of 
Ajjril, 1859, a small body of men, who miglit well be called the pioneers 
of the vSuez Canal, headed by M. Laroclie, landed at that s])()t of the 
narrow sandy sli]), whicli had been cliosen as the starting point of the 
canal from the Mediterranean, and the site of the city and port intended 
ultimately to rival Alexandria. It owed its selection, not to its being 
the spot from which the shortest line could be drawn — that would have 
been the Gulf of Pelusinm — but to its being that jjoint of the coast 
to which dee]) water appproached the nearest. There eight metres of 
water, equal to about twenty-six feet, the contemplated depth of the 
canal, were found at a di.stance of less than two miles. At the Gulf 
of Pelusinm that dejilli only existed at more llian five miles from the 
coast. The spot was called Port vSaid, in honor of the then Viceroy. 
On the 25th of April, M. de Lesseps, surrounded by ten or fifteen 
Europeans and some one hundred native workmen, gave the first stnjke 
of the spade to the future Bosphorus between Asia and Africa. Hard, 
indeed, must have been the life of the first workers on this desolate strip 
of sand. The nearest place fioni which fresh water could be procured 
was Damietta, a distance of thirty-six miles. It was brought thence 
across Lake Menzala in Arab Ijoats, but calms or storms often delayed 
the arrival of the looked f tr store ; sometimes, indeed, it was altogether 
lost and the powers of endurance of the little band were sorely tried. 
After a time di-stilling machines were put uj), and, in 1863, water was 
received through pipes from the Fresh "Water Canal which liad been 
completed to the centre of the Istlimus." 

The town of Port vSaid unquestionably owes its origin to the 
construction of the vSuez Canal. It is located at the entrance end of a 
small island, behmging U) that narrow strip of sandy beach which 
separates Lake Menzala from the Mediterranean Sea. It has been laid 
out with fine broad streets and handsome brick buildings. There is 



126 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

nothing to interest the tourist or student in the town itself, excepting 
its remarkable growth from an insignificant sand spit, to a city of over 
forty thousand inhabitants, and the largest coaling station in the world. 
But the immense amount of laborious dredging necessary before laying 
the foundation is simply inexpressible. The town soon became a 
regular manufacturing and repairing workshop, as it were, with 
machinery running day and night. Mechanics of all kinds were con- 
tinually employed, some in laying the foundation of the rising city, 
others making the enormous stones for the jetties, carpenters and builders 
putting up houses, while hundreds of men were engaged in the con- 
struction of the harbors and basins. All was bustle and work, resulting 
in a citj^ of about forty thousand in less than forty years, with beautiful 
hotels, mosques, hospitals, churches, dwelling houses ; in fact, all the 
adjuncts of a modern sea poit. In the construction of this canal they 
used some of the most extraordinary dredges ever known. In order that 
you, my dear brothers and readers, may be enabled to understand some- 
thing about them and their value in the construction, I will quote you 
from Murray, page 284 : " First among them was the long couloir (long 
duct), an iron spout of semi-elliptical form, two hundred and thirty feet 
long, iive and one-half wide, and two deep ; by means of which a dredger, 
working in the centre of the channel, could discharge its contents beyond 
the bank. This enormous spout was supported on an iron framework, 
which rested partly on the dredge and partly on a floating lighter. The 
dredgings, when dropped into the upper end of this spout, were assisted 
in their progress down it, by water supplied by a rotary pump, and by an 
endless chain, to which were fixed scrapers — large pieces of wood that 
fitted the inside of the spout and forced on pieces of stone and clay. By 
these means the spouts could deliver their dredgings at almost a hori- 
zontal line, and the water had the further good effect of reducing the 
dredgings to a semi-liquid condition, thus causing them to spread them- 
selves over a larger surface, and settle down better. The work done by 
these long spouted dredges was extraordinary ; eighty thousand cubic 
yards of soil a month was the average, but as much as one hundred and 
twenty thousand was sometimes accomplished. When the banks were 
too high for the long spouts to be tised, another ingenious machine called 
an elevateiir, was introduced. This consisted of an inclined plane, run- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 127 

ning upwards from over the water line, and supported on an iron frame, 
the lower part of which rested over the water, on a steam float, and the 
upper part on a platform, moving on rails along the bank. The plane 
carried a tramway, along which ran an axle on wheels, worked by the 
engine of the steam float. From this axle hung four chains. As soon 
as a lighter containing seven huge boxes filled with dredgings was towed 
under the lower part of this e/evatetcr, the chains hanging from the axle 
were hooked to one of the boxes, and the machine being set in motion 
the box was first raised, and then carried along swinging beneath the 
axle to the top of the plane ; then by a self-acting contrivance, it tilted 
over and emptied its contents over the bank. It was then run down 
again, dropped into its place in the lighter, and the operation repeated 
with the next box. No such dredging operations had ever been 
undertaken before." 

The harbor of Port Said has an area of about five hundred and 
seventy acres, with an average depth of twenty-seven f'^et, the entrance 
to which is protected by two very strong and substantial stone piers. 
The one on the East running out into the sea in a northerly direction 
for fully a mile, while the one on the V/est extends into the sea in a 
north-easterl}^ direction for about one mile and a half Where these 
piers start from the land, they are seven hundred and twenty fathoms 
apart, but they approach each other, at their extremities, to about three 
hundred and eighty-five fathoms There is a channel or entrance 
ranging from fifty to eight}^ fathoms wide, that is well marked and 
buoyed. These buo3^s are lit up at night so as to direct the pilot in the 
course he should take in his passage with vessels going into or out of 
the harbor. _ The lighthouse stands on the low sandy spit, that I have 
already referred to, which separates the INIediterranean from Lake 
Menzala. It is built of concrete fully one hundred and seventy-six feet 
high. It is furnished with electric lights that are distinctl}' visible at 
a distance of twenty-four miles at sea. It is a flash light that flashes 
every twenty seconds. 

I do not wish to dwell upon the town of Port Said, or to give a full 
account of the moles and harbor, or the towns that sprang into existence 
through the construction of this remarkable canal, one of the grandest, 
if not the greatest piece of w-ork ever performed during the wonderful 



128 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

nineteenth century — connecting the Red with the Mediterranean Sea at 
the enormous outlay of about eight hundred and fifty million dollars, up 
to the opening of the canal, on the seventeenth day of November, 1869. 
The canal was not entirely completed at that date, as it only had 
about nineteen to twenty feet of water in it, allowing only light draft 
ships to pass through, those drawing not over eighteen feet of water. 
At the present writing, however, there is an average depth of twenty- 
seven feet nine inches, from Port Said to the Red Sea, thus enabling 
vessels of large draft to pass safely through its entire length of one 
hundred miles, without difficult}^ or danger. The average width of this 
canal is two hundred and fifty-nine feet. But in some of the deep cut- 
tings the width is only about one hundred and ninety feet wide on the 
water line, while in other places, where the banks are low, the water line 
is full}^ three hundred and twenty-eight feet, thus making the average 
width of the canal two hundred and fifty-nine feet. 

The passage through the canal saves, on the voyage from England 
to Bombay, nearly five thousand miles, and from New York to the same 
place, there is a saving of about three thousand six hundred miles in 
distance, and possibly three weeks in time. As I previously stated, the 
scheme of connecting the two seas was no new idea, originating in the 
nineteenth century. It had been under contemplation long centuries 
before Christ ; for it is recorded by Aristotle, Strabo and many other 
historians that Rameses II. cut a canal between the sea and the river 
Nile, B. c. 1340. 

Wilkinson in his "Ancient Egyptians," Volume I, page 74, ef scg., 
quoting Herodotus, says, " Sesostris (Rameses) fitted out a fleet of war 
ships that went bej^ond the Red Sea, invading India." He supposes 
that Rameses II. was the first of the Egyptian monarchs who built ships 
of war, although he admits that they may have been used at a much 
earlier period. He also says, "And we may reasonabl}^ conclude the 
fleet to have been connected with the Indian trade, as well^ as the canal 
he cut from the Nile, to what is now called the Gulf of Suez. This 
canal commenced about twelve miles to the north-east of the modern 
town of Belbys, called b3^ the Romans Biibasth Agria, although Strabo 
claims that it started from the village of Thecansa, not far from Pithom. 
After flowing in a direction nearly East for about thirty-three miles, it 



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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 129 

turned to Soutli-soutlieast, and continued about sixty-three more in that 
line to the extremity of the Arabian Gulf." 

Again he says although the old channel is " filled with sand its 
direction is still easily traced, as well from the appearance of its channel 
as from the mounds and vestiges of ancient towns upon its banks, in one of 
which I found a monument bearing the sculpture and name of Rameses 
II. ; the more satisfactory, as being a strong proof of its having existed 
at least as early as the reign of that monarch. 

"After the time of the Ptolemies and Caesars it was again neglected 
and suffered to go to decay ; but on the revival of trade with India, this 
line of communication, from the Red Sea to the Nile, was once more 
proposed, the canal was re-opened by the Caliphs, and it continued to be 
used and kept in repair till the commerce of Alexandria was ruined by 
the discovery of the passage around the Cape." 

Notwithstanding this account there are other historians who claim 
that the work was done a century earlier by Seti, the father of Rameses, 
and they bring forward as evidence the scene on the outside of the North 
wall of the temple of Karnak in which he is said to have made his 
triumphant return from Asia by way of Ta-tcnal. 

Seti, the father of Rameses 11., was the Pharaoh under whom Joseph 
served as governor, and history positively informs lis that Joseph intro- 
duced a system of irrigation into Egypt, by cutting canals from the river 
Nile to various parts of the desert, thus bringing under cultivation an 
enormous amount of land, which had long lain waste, barren, and 
desolate. Therefore, possibly, from the cutting of these canals for irri- 
gating purposes, Seti, or his son Rameses, might have conceived the idea 
of connecting the two seas by constructing a canal from the Red Sea to 
the Nile, and thus operate their ships during war, to transport their 
warriors to all parts of Asia in time of need. 

According to Herodotus, Book II, Chap. 158, Necho (who is spoken 
of in the second book of Kings), reconstructed this canal, but sacrificed 
one hundred and twent}' thousand men during the performance of the 
work. He only desisted from his operations on account of a warning 
received from an Oracle, which stated " tliat he was labormg for the 
barbarian^ This prophecy has been fulfilled, or verified, in our day, 
the canal now being used solely by barbarians for the express purpose 



130 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

of sending their ships from Port Said to the Red Sea, and vice versa. By 
this route they are enabled to save much time going to India, etc., over 
the journey around the " Cape of Good Hope." The Egyptians called all 
nieu barbarians who lived above the first cataract, or spoke a different 
language from their own. 

This canal was commenced by Necho, B. c. 6io, at a considerable 
distance north of Suez, and it wound its way along in a north-westerly 
direction, until it reached and tapped the river Nile at the city of 
Bubastis, through the Pelusiac branch, near Zaqaziq. The length of 
this canal, according to Pliny, was about sixty-two Roman miles, or fifty- 
seven of ours. When Herodotus gives the length of one hundred and 
fourteen miles to this canal he must have included the distance from sea 
to sea, as by carefully examining the line from its start, and following 
the sinuosities of its course through the valley to the site of Bubastis, 
we shall find that Pliny's account will agree with our own measure- 
ments. 

Necho, no doubt, constructed this canal for the purpose of saving the 
immense labor and trouble of transporting men and munitions of war 
across the desert. Seeing parts of the old canal of Seti or Rameses, no 
doubt first gave him the idea of making a waterway across the istlimus. 
The fact of there having been one, naturally suggested the idea to Necho of 
reopening it, or of making another, which work he most assuredly accom- 
plished, for histor}^ informs us that he sent a fleet of ships to circumnavi- 
gate Africa, a feat which was accomplished in three years. Tliose making 
the voyage sailed from Egypt into the Southern Ocean, but stopped 
whenever and wherever they desired. It is specially mentioned that they 
went on shore at one place and planted a crop of corn, camping there and 
waiting for it to grow and ripen, and they harvested it before continuing 
their voyage around Africa. In this way they lost an immense amount of 
time. 

When the Persians conquered Egypt, under Cambyses, B. c. 525, 
the canal was found to be no longer navigable, and it remained so until 
Darius I., in b. c. 520, re-opened it and restored it to its natural chan- 
nel. He had the interest of this country at heart, consequently 
everything in his power was done to promote the commercial welfare of 
the country and the interests of the people. As the centuries rolled 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 1^1 

along it again became obstructed, by sand drifting in from tbe desert 
and filling it up in many places along its entire lengtb ; but was opened 
up once more by the Emperor Trajan, during the latter part of the first 
century A. D., or the beginning of our present era. He cleared out the 
old canal and made it navigable ; but started his work from a different 
place, and cut a canal to join the old one, which was at a point above 
Cairo, called Amnis Trajanus. 

From this period the canal seems to have remained open until the 
countr}^ was dominated by the Arab Caliphs, when it was closed again, in 
order to prevent supplies being sent to the rebels in Medina. It was filled 
up by order of Hl-Mansur, brother of Abbas, the second Caliph of the 
Abbaside Dynasty, and remained closed until it was once more cleaned 
out, by order of El-Hakem in the year A. D. i,ooo. 

This Caliph was the third of the Fatimide Dynasty, the founder 
of the sect called the Druses, and a persecutor of the Christians. He 
believed himself to be an incarnation of the Deity. He was assassinated 
at the instigation of his sister. From this time nothing was done to 
the canal to keep it in repair, and consequently through sheer neglect it 
soon became choked and unnavigable. When cutting the canal was first 
talked of, and M. de Lesseps was trying to raise funds for the work, 
the nations ridiculed and scoffed at the idea, and none more so than the 
British. On its completion England recognized the full value of the 
canal, and was the first to profit by it. Seeing the immense advantage 
to be derived in controlling the canal, she purchased from the Khedive 
his interest in that wonderful piece of work, and to-day is enabled tO' 
keep in rapid communication with her India and China colonies, also 
reaping an enormous profit from her investment in this most magnificent 
water-course — the Suez Canal. 

I mentioned above that El-Hakem was the founder of the sect or 
society known as the Druses, and thinking that it would be of some 
interest to you, my dear Brothers and readers, I shall give you quite a 
lengthy account of these very remarkable people, quoting fully from 
various able authorities, the first of which will be from the work 
of C. W. Heckethorn's " Secret Societies," Book IV, volume i, page 
126, wherein he says, in his remarks concerning the Druses, that: 
" Their sect may be said to date its rise from the supposed incarnation 



132 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

of God in Hakem Bamr Allah, publicly announced at Cairo in A. D. 
I020." 

This Hakem was the sixth Caliph of Eg3'pt, and Darazi, his 
confessor, took an active part in promoting the imposture, which, 
however, was at first so badly received that he was compelled to take 
refuge in the deserts of the Lebanon, where, receiving liberal pecuniary 
support from Hakem, he found hearers among the Arabs and soon made 
converts. According to other accounts, Darazi was killed for preaching 
his doctrine, and thus became the first martyr to the new religion. A 
footing thus gained, correspondence was opened with Egypt, and Hamze, 
a Persian Mystic, and Vizier of Hakem, who had from the first been a 
zealous supporter of Hakem's divinity, hastened to avail himself of the 
favorable opening. Ten years did not elapse before the two clever 
rogues, or fiery fanatics, had converted nearly all the Arab tribes inhab- 
iting the Lebanon, while one portion of them were set apart and initiated 
into the mysteries of the doctrines of Hamze. But he did not give his 
name to the sect. By a natural etymology the disciples of Darazi^ the 
first teacher, obtained the name Druses, though they reject it and call 
themselves Unitarians. We may thus look upon the Fatimide Caliph 
Hakem, the Persian Hamze, and the Turk Darazi as the founders of the 
Druse system, Hakem being its political founder, Hamze its intellectual 
framer, and Darazi its expositor and propagator. 

^^'' Religious books of t lie Druses.'' — Hamze associated with himself 
four assistants, to whom, as well as to himself, he gave high-sounding 
names. He called himself, for instance, Universal Reason, the Centre, 
Messiah of Nations, Jesus United, i. e., he who is ever united with God. 
He had, moreover, one hitndred and fifty-nine disciples, who went about 
preaching. The Druses call their religious books, ' The Sittings of the 
Rulers, and Their Learned Men,' comprised in six volumes. The first 
has the title, ' The Diploma; ' the second, ' The Reputation ; ' the third, 
'■ The Awakening; ' the fourth, ' The First of the Seven Parts;' fhe fifth, 
'The Staircase,' and the sixth, 'The Reproaches.' In 1S17 the Druses 
obtained a seventh volume from a Christian, who alleged to have found it 
in an Egyptian school, and which they call 'The Book of the Greeks.' 

"The ''Murder of Hakem.^ — Hakem was one of the most cruel 
monsters on record, a Saracen Nero. Amidst carnage, and the most 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 133 

revolting persecutions, he spread his doctrine. But in Eg^'pt, where he 
resided, his heresy outraged the true believers and his savagery the whole 
people. Sitt-El-Mulk, his own sister, headed the malcontents and one 
evening, when, according to his custom, he took his ride on a white ass, 
she caused him to be assassinated by some trusty followers, who having 
despatched him with their daggers, undressed him, and securely concealed 
the naked body. The}^ then carefully fastened up his clothes again, by 
order of his sister, who did not wish the belief in his divinity to be 
destroyed. At last when the Caliph did not return and those sent to look 
for him returned with the news that they had found his clothes, but not 
his body, it was said that Hakem had simply rendered himself invisible, 
to test the faith of his followers, and to punish apostates on his return. 
And the Druses, to explain the miracle, say that Hakem possessed a 
body of more subtle substance than the usual human body, and could go 
forth out of his clothes without opening or tearing them. The dagger 
cuts in them are explained away as mysterious indications of certain pur- 
poses of the Deity. 

" '' Hakevis Successors.'' — Hakem left two sons, but the sect did not 
acknowledge them as such. Ali Ess Ssahir, who succeeded his father as 
Caliph, is reported to have said to Hamze, ' Worship me as you wor- 
shipped my father ; ' but Hamze replied, ' Our Lord, who be praised, 
neither begat nor was he begotten.' Ali replied, 'Then I and my brother 
are illegitimate ? ' Hamze answered, ' You have said it, and borne testi- 
mony against yourself.' Thereupon the enraged Ali ordered the whole- 
sale murder of the Unitarians, unless they returned to the Moslem faith. 
Those who refused were either slain or iled to Syria to their co-religion- 
ists. Ali, to conciliate the people who had, by his father's despotism and 
oppression, been greatly embittered against his dynasty, gave up all title 
to divine honors and the rights it implied. 

'''"'' Doctrines.'' — The Druses believe in the transmigration of souls ; 
but probably it is merely a figure, as it was to the Pythagoreans. 
Hakem is their prophet, and they have seven commandments, religious 
and moral. The first of these is veracity, by which is understood faith 
in the Unitarian religion they profess and abhorrence of that lie which is 
called polytheism, incredulity, error. To a brother, perfect truth and 
confidence are due ; but it is allowable, nay, a duty, to be false toward 



134 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

men of another creed. The Sect is divided into three degress : Profane^ 
Aspirants and ]]'isc. A Druse who has entered the second may return to 
the first desrree, but incurs death if he reveals what he has learned. In 
their secret meetings thej^ are supposed to worship a calf s head ; but as 
their religious books are full of denunciations against idolatry, and as 
they also compare Judaism, Christianity and Mohammedanism to a calf, 
it is more probable that this efi&g}? represents the principle of falsehood 
and evil, Iblis, the rival of Hakem. The Druses have also been accused 
of licentious orgies, and are said by Baspier in his ' Remarks on Recant ' 
(an English diplomatist), to marry their own daughters; but according 
to the evidence of resident Christians, a young Druse as soon as he is 
initiated, gives up all dissolute habits and becomes, at least in appearance, 
quite another man, meriting, as in other initiations, the title of ' new 
born.' The initiated are known by the appellation of Ockals, and form a 
kind of priesthood in the midst of the general population. 

" According to their traditions, the world was at the appearance of 
God, in the form of Hakem, three thousand four hundred and thirty 
million 3'ears old, and the\^ believe, like the Chiliast of England and 
America that the Millennium is almost at hand. The Wise often retire 
into hermitages, whereby they acquire great honor and influence. When 
discoursing with a Mohammedan, the Druses profess to be of the same 
creed; when talking with a Christian, they are Christians. They defend 
this deception b}^ alleging that it is not lawful to reveal any dogma of 
their creed to a ' Black' or unbeliever; and their secrecy with regard to 
their religion has led them to adopt signs and passwords, such as are in 
use among Free Masons and other secret societies. When in doubt 
whether a stranger with whom they conversed belonged to their sect, they 
would ask, ' Do people in your part of the countr}^ sow balm seed?' If 
the other replied, ' Yes, it is sown in the hearts of the faithful,' he prob- 
ably was a co-religionist ; but he might be an Aspirant only, and there- 
fore would question him further, as to some of the secret dogmas ; if he did 
not understand the drift of their questions, the}^ would know that he was 
not initiated into the higher grades. But their signs and test words and 
phrases had frequently to be changed, their import having been dis- 
covered b}^ the Blacks, which happened especiallj^ when the extensive 
hermit village of Bajjado, near Chasbai, was destroyed in 1838 by the 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 135 

troops of Ibrahim Pasha, and the sacred books of the Druses made pub- 
licly known. 

'' ' Customs of tJic Druses.'' — Every village has its meeting-houses, 
where religious and political affairs are discussed every Thursday night, 
the Wise men and women attending. The resolutions passed at such 
meetings are communicated to the district meetings, held in the chief 
village of every district, which again report to the general assembly in 
the town of Baklin on Mount Lebanon. This was the fortified seat of 
government until, in the last century, Deir El-Kammar (the moon 
monastery) was built as the Lebanon metropolis. At the general 
assembl}' the questions raised at the district meetings are discussed, and 
the deputies from the different villages who have attended, on their 
return home, announce the decisions arrived at ; so that the Druses, in 
fact, have a regular family council to which, however, the Wise are only 
admitted, the uninitiated never being consulted on political or social 
matters. The civil government of the Druses is in the hands of the 
Sheiks, who again are subject to the Emir or Prince of Lebanon. 

" The}^ are warlike and industrious, and two traits in their character 
deserve notice and commendation ; they refuse to give up any man who 
has sought refuge among them, and detest the European tall hat which 
thej'^ compare to a ' cooking pot,' and laugh at it. In the days when 
Burkhardt visited them, one of their maledictions was, ' May God put a 
hat on you ! ' The number of Druses does not exceed fifty or sixty 
thousand, exclusively occupj'ing, in the Lebanon, upwards of forty large 
towns and villages, and nearly two hundred and thirty villages with a 
mixed population of Druses and Christians, whilst in the anti-Lebanon, 
they are also possessed of nearly eighty exclusively Druse villages." 

In giving this account of the Druses I felt that it would deeply 
interest all Masons and students, because, whenever tljey go forth into 
those Eastern countries, or come in contact with the wandering Arabs of 
the desert, the descendants of Hagar and Ishmael, who went forth into 
the desert with a "jng of water and a loaf of bread," will recognize the 
similarity between their teachings and our own. Many of their signs 
are an exoteric recognition, as all may see them, though all who see them 
may not understand them. But, it is a positive fact that mau}^ of these 
people recognize a brother without either sign or word. 



136 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

The Druses, like all other secret societies of antiquit}^, Avere not 
formed for political purposes, but more expressly for the better under- 
standing of Man and Nature. Their teachings embraced the most 
profound philosophies, all arts, science and religion, and in coming to an 
understanding of these sublime teachings every one began to realize that 
they were receiving their tnie wages, "LiGHT," PowER and WiSDOM. 
Then they would be enabled to travel in foreign countries, and receive 
and appreciate a " Master's Wages." 

Ragon sa3'S in his " Cours PhilosopJiiqtic de Initiations Anciennes ct 
Modern,'''' -page. 171: "That our Blue Lodge degrees demonstrate the 
following subjects to the initiate and Mason : ist. The history of the 
human race, classified by epochs. 2d. The history of Civilization and 
of the progress of the human Mind in the Arts and Sciences, as pro- 
duced by the Ancient Mysteries. 3d. The knowledge of Nature or 
the knowledge of the Divinity, manifested in his works and of all 
religious." 

Brother W. H. Kingsbury in the " Trestle Board," Vol. IX, page 
244, ct seq., in speaking of Brother Rawson's late travels through 
Arabia, Palestine and Syria, where he had especially investigated 
Masonry as practiced by the Druses, says : " The Master represents the 
unknown, the unseen, the all-powerful, and sits in the place of honor, 
whence he delivers his orders to his assistants, who are appointed at the 
time of meeting. The candidate is prepared — partly clothed — and after 
a strict examination, under the direction of the Master, is led before him 
screened from the assembly by a veil or shaM'l, held up bj' two brothers. 
The usual requirements as to age, free birth and free will are made, and 
also touching his general knowledge of men and things, as in the case of 
a literary degree among us. Not a word is said about religious faith or 
creed, not even as to belief in Deity. It is presumed that all rational 
men have consciousness of a Supreme existence, whether or not it is 
defined in words or symbols. The very word Allah (God) is an exotic 
in Arabia. The Bedouin idealizes the race, and imagines it personified 
into what he calls the ' Abram^ the Great Father, usually written among 
us ''Abraham,^ from whom are derived all living men, and to whom they 
all return at death. The only world of being they know is the present, 
and the ov\y things worth notice are those relating to Man. Their 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 137 

Masonry is, therefore, a means of securing a better life here, without any 
reference to any other, past or future. 

" The idea of collective man (humanitj-) is very ancient and its 
teachings are simple ; that man was derived from the great source ; that 
he returns to the same and that it is his dut}' to make life as important 
as possible ; first for himself, which means with the Arab a discharge of 
duty to others for the sake of its return to himself. The will of the 
Sheikh (Master) is the law of the Lodge, but the will of the Master must 
be guided by the ancient law, which is invariable and inevitable. The 
teachings of the Lodge enlightens the conscience and lifts the neophyte 
above himself into a prevision of motives, the only sure guarantee of 
morals. 

''The notion, which has grown into a belief, that an injury done 
to any member of the race will reflect upon any doer of the deed, not as 
an accident, but as a necessity of law, is a law of nature. Learning 
chiefly through observation, the Arab sees in the frequent exercise of 
the will of the Sheikh an apparent check or interference with the law of 
nature ; but experience teaches him, through more careful observation, 
that the law invariably re-asserts itself. The Abraham is the ideal of 
excellence in human life, the type that the initiate is instructed to 
imitate in the daily walk of life. The esoteric work of the Lodge would 
be out of place here and intelligible to only a few initiates. A general 
idea, therefore, of the objects or purpose of the Lodge will be more 
acceptable to the reader. 

" There is no Masonic literature in Arabic beyond the walls of the 
coast cities, and there is no true Masonry in those cities. The ritual, 
the whole framework of the craft in the cities, has become Europeanized, 
more or less, according to the locality, as having been the abode of 
merchants and others from Europe. The true Arab Mason never records 
anything except in memory. There can be no paper brother among 
them, no book Mason, and to advance the neophyte must have obtained 
from authorized sources. 

" Masonry in the desert is the privilege of the few. None but the 
choicest men are admitted to the charmed circle. To a stranger in such a 
country, Masonic knowledge is an unqualified passport and introduction. 
An interesting feature of the craft is this : When one proposes a journey 



138 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

through a distvirbed and dangerous country or district, some trusty 
brother is selected to whom the traveller is delivered, and the Masonic 
tie is renewed between them, when the guardian becomes responsible for 
his ward, life for life. This custom never fails of commanding respect, 
even between hostile tribes, except the traveller be guilty of shedding 
blood not in self defence. The protection of women and children is an 
obligation that is never neglected. Any shortcoming in this matter 
would heap dishonor on the head of the erring one. 

" I^iterature has changed the character of our craft in so many 
points that careful study is required to ascertain the ancient meaning 
and practice, and even the closest application sometimes fails in tracing 
an ancient origin, for some things in frequent use in the Lodge and 
elsewhere by the brethren. No such innovation (removal of an ancient 
landmark) is possible in the desert, where the traditions of all the Tribal 
Lodges correct the errors that may have crept in through some over- 
zealous worker. The language in use in the Lodge is not that of 
modern literature ; but is that of the earl}- ages, known as Yoktan, in 
the centre; of Ishmael, in the West; of Yemen, in the South. The 
earliest language that has been preserved is poetic. The ritual of the 
modern Lodge is rhymned, questioned and answered in the choicest terms, 
according to the grammar of the present idiom, which also is the oldest. 
To the philologist these items are proof of the antiquity of our Fraternity 
more convincing even than monuments of stone, which can be made in 
every age, while language must grow, and is not made. The Egyptians 
recorded in writing and in pictures their rites and ceremonies, which 
make visible the condition of the fraternity and those matters at that 
time, about four thousand years ago. We reap in those pictures the 
same lessons that are taught to us now, although they are distributed 
through the several degrees from the first to the thirty-second. 

" The work in the Arab Lodge shows a close connection between 
the members of the ancient brotherhood of Egypt and Arabia, and also 
established the antiquity of the origin of the Bedouin Lodges. There is 
not a word in use in the modern Lodge that has any reference to moderti 
discoveries in science, or to the political or religious changes of the last 
twenty centuries. Neither Christ nor Mohammed are mentioned. This 
fact opens a charming vista to the antiquarian and philologist. The 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 139 

cost of indulgence in this storehouse of antiquity is a local residence 
among the Bedouin Arabs, and a thorough knowledge of their language 
and customs. 

" Jl^itli the Arab the instruction of the Lodge is a preparation for a 
better life ; with the Egyptians it was a preparation for death. The Arab 
still lives in the same social conditions in which history noticed him forty 
centuries ago, while the Egyptian ceased to exist as a Nation about 
twenty-five centuries since. How much these different results were due 
to their peculiar ideas, is 3'et an unsolved problem. Arab Masonr}' fur- 
nishes a beautiful emblem of eternity, whose cycles are marked by 
supreme efforts for the redemption of mankind from the slavery of 
Ignorance and Superstition ; while the Craft in our day lends itself for 
the perpetuation of errors peculiar to priest-craft. 

" That mysterious Asiatic Peninsula, called Arabia, ever seems to 
be a geographic, historic and political wonder; for, while Empires like 
Assyria, Persia, India, Greece, and Rome were changing and vanishing, 
Arabia and Ishmael's children remained immutable. The Assyrians, 
Persians, Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans tried in vain to subjugate 
Hagar's progeny; the}' stand to-day with their language, manners, cus- 
toms and traditions where they stood three thousand years ago. Renan, 
and Maspero have lately given the world some valuable hints on that 
mysterious people and country. Perhaps Freemasonry with its gentle, 
peaceful and persuasive methods of approaching people will succeed in 
opening that sealed country to the world ; if so Dr. Rawson will be con- 
sidered as a pioneer in the grand enterprise." 

There were some very interesting articles published in Blackwood's 
Magazine by a student and Brother Mason, who claims that these 
people are the true lineal descendants of Hiram, King of Tyre. He had 
lived among the Druses and had studied their peculiar manners and 
customs and was thoroughly competent, worthy, and well qualified to 
write upon this subject. He tells us that after having carefully inves- 
tigated the esoteric teachings of their mystic rites and ceremonies he 
found many things in common between their Rites and Freemasonry. He 
also says that he was very much astonished in finding many of the words 
identically the same and that their work for the pre-requisite of initiation 
was identical with the A. F. and A. M. In fact he, upon one occasion, 



140 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

received satisfactory evidence from one of these people, when making a 
contract with him, of his knowledge of the 'V of a Master Mason, for, in 
ratifying the contract he was very much surprised to hear the man men- 
tion what is generally given on many points. He adduces and 
summarizes the following for his belief as to their origin : — -ist. " That 
they had lived from time immemorial where Hamze found them, on the 
slopes of Lebanon, towards Tyre and Sidon. 2nd. Their one great hero 
of Old Testament history is Solomon. 3rd. They stoutly maintain that 
the}^ built King Solomon's temple. 4th. Their religious rites and cere- 
monies are to the present day intimately associated with the mystic rites 
of Freemasonry, which, as it is well known, are supposed to have 
originated at the building of Solomon's temple.'' 

" Sir Charles Warren, R. E., K. C, M. G., Worshipful Master Lodge 
Quatuor Coronati, London, England," says Professor Marks, D. D., (one 
of the most profound Hebrew scholars), '' found in an Arabic manuscript, 
written in Hebrew characters of the fifteenth century, that the keyword 
to the MS. was Mach or Mock, and on further investigation he discov- 
ered that each letter of the keyword was the beginning of a sentence, 
which ultimately read thus : — We have found our Master Hiram. He 
made out the meaning readily, inasmuch as the passage referred to 
Masonry, which, by-the-b}^, is traced np to the patriarchs, if not to Adam 
himself. Both Hebrews and Arabs make up a sentence upon one word, 
using each letter of it as expressive of a separate word." 

Brother W. H. Kingsbury gives to Masonry an antiquity like myself 
and many other writers. He claims, however, that " Modern Masonry is 
a combination of the mysteries of the Hebrews, the Phcenicians and the 
Egyptians ; mysteries which were in older da3'S unknown to au}' but the 
High Priests of the several Orders and which were entirely apart and dis- 
tinct from the popular rendering of them. I take it that the knowledge 
derived from these severally was as follows: From the Hebrews Jl' or 
Knowledge — God ; from the Egyptians 5 the Sciences; from the Phoeni- 
cians B the Fine Arts, and these are symbolized in the Lodges; the 
W. M., JV. a Hebrew, or Grand Master Solomon; the S. W., 5., an 
Egyptian, or Grand Master Hiram ; the J. W., B., a Phoenician, or 
Grand Master Hiram Abiff. In a word, I think there is not a doubt 
that in our Order we are the direct descendants from Phoenicians, who 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 141 

first moulded Masonr}' into its present form, and who were unable to 
openly worship the true God, for fear of the people. 

" Masonry has unquestionabh' come down to us through the 
Gentiles and not through the Hebrews. The Lodge of the Phceniciaus 
was constructed with windows at the East, South, and West. The 
IV. Af., was placed in the East their sanctum, sanctorum ; S. IV. was 
placed in the West, at the great entrance to represent the sun at 
evening, and the J. W., was placed in the South to represent the sun 
at High Twelve. 

" The arms of the Grand Lodge are still Masonically of unknown 
origin. They are purely Hebraic, and seem connected with the idea of 
the Ark of the Covenant. They were found among the papers of the 
learned Rabbi, Leon Judah, who lectured b}^ Roj-al Patent in 1680 on a 
model of the temple of Solomon. Leon Judah, who was proficient in the 
Jewish Cabala, ma}' also have been a member of the Hermetic Society." 

I have quoted ver}' extensivel}- from various writers upon the Druses 
in order that you, my dear Brothers and readers, may get a general idea 
of the opinions of the various authors, as well as my own, upon these 
people. If we carefully examine what has been written about them, we 
shall find many things which will prove of great interest to us. For 
instance, if 3'ou will notice what Brother Kingsbury sa3'S in relation to 
Brother Rawson's account of his travels, 3'ou will realize that the Arab 
Mason in the Bedouin Lodges could not have been obligated on either 
the Bible or the Koran, because in the Bedouin Lodges neither Christ 
nor Mohammed are mentioned. I shall speak of this subject later on in 
another chapter. 

They also tell us that the esoteric teachings of the Arab Mason was 
the preparation for a better life, and that of the Eg^'ptian Brother was a 
preparation for death. So we find the teachings of both were the same, 
if properlj' understood, for the man who prepares to lead a purer, truer 
life, prepares for his future death, which is inevitable, and the}' both 
must realize that if they desire to die the death of the righteous they 
must live the life of the righteous. The act of death or dying does not 
make a man good or bad. He is what he has made himself through his 
thoughts and acts during life. I shall also speak of this later on. I 
simply call your attention to these points in the teachings of our ancient 



1^:^ EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Brothers, and compare them with our own to find simply a distinction 
without a difference. Brother Kingsbury states that " Masonry comes 
down to us from the Gentiles, and not through the Hebrew." 

Now every Masonic student will realize that IMasonry has passed 
through every epoch of the world's history. At the same time he will 
find that many things have been preserved to the fraternity by the 
Hebrew, whose forefathers were princes in Israel, when ours were digging 
clams with stone hatchets out of the lagoons of Europe. I myself make 
the assertion that we owe a great deal to the Hebrew people for the 
preservation of some of our symbology, of which I shall speak later on. 

In the quarterly statement of the Palestine Exploration Fund there 
is some very valuable information relating to the Druses and their 
religions, meetings, beliefs, etc., furnished by a Mr. Joseph Jebrail, 
wherein he states that " reliable information regarding the Druses is not 
to be found ever3?where, but the extracts here given are confirmed by 
Major Condor. The Druse places of worship are called chapels. They 
believe that there are many Druses in China, and that the religion of the 
English people is the Druse religion, though its votaries are not known 
by that name in England." 

During my stay in the city of Los Angeles, Southern California, 
in the year 1S97, I had the pleasure of meeting the Reverend Hasket 
Smith, M. A., who at that time was delivering a series of lectures on 
Egypt, Syria and the Hol}^ Land, illustrated by sterioptic views. I 
had quite a long and enjoyable chat with him iipon these people and 
countries, which I have already mentioned. We also spoke of ancient 
Masonry, when I told him that I had met quite a large number of Arabs 
in different parts of those countries who had certainly proved to my 
entire satisfaction that they had obtained the right Light of Truth from 
some source. 

During the time that this gentleman lived among the Druses 
he had the good fortune to save the life of one of the prominent young 
men who had been bitten by a venomous snake. Mr. Smith sacked the 
wound, and in this way drew the deadly poison from the body of the 
young man. In performing this act he made a host of friends, and was 
welcomed by the entire people. Their homes were thrown open to 
him and he became popular among them. He was also initiated into 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 143 

different rites or degrees among them that were unknown to the gen- 
eral traveller in that country, and he, like Brother Rawson, was very 
much astonished at their knowledge of the various signs, grips and 
tokens of Ancient Masonry. He thoroughly believed the Druses to be 
tbe true and lineal descendants of the Hittites, a branch of those ancient 
Phoenicians who wrought in the mountains of Lebanon, near Joppa, 
and supplied Solomon with the cedar for the building of the temple on 
Mount Moriah. 

Let me close this chapter by quoting you some passages from the 
Druse books : " When men were created, they knew not the origin of 
their existence, nor did they seek God by tbeir works. Wherefore He 
impressed upon their souls conviction of truths, and the knowledge of 
truth, so that they knew and acknowledged Him. He manifested 
Himself unto them, by His works; and by His revelations of Himself in 
Nature taught them His greatness, and made them to know His unity, 
so that they said, ' God is great, There is no God but God.' Thus He 
calls them unto Him, saying, ' Am I not your God,' and they believed in 
the unity of the Most High. 

" It was the Most Wise Intellect which was standing with God in 
the place of a priesthood, inviting the people to know their Creator, the 
Most High, and His unity. And this Intellect taught the people the 
arts and sciences, aided by the Creator, who gave him wisdom and 
spiritual sovereignty and potencies, and made bim Priest, Prophet, Aider, 
Director, and Advisor. 

" And this Intellect gave to men the faculty to distinguish 
between what is right and good, and wise, and what is wrong and bad, 
and foolish, enabling them to avoid excesses and follies, and evil deeds. 
And the benediction of the Lord God Almighty was over all the earth. 
May God make us and all our Brethren disciples of the true Faith, and 
deliver us from doubts after having attained to the truths ! Amen. 

" There are seven laws which every Akel or Ockal (Druse) will 
observe while the ray of the Divine light within him is not withdrawn 
from him, leaving him only his animal nature. The first is that of the 
Truth of the Tongue. It is the belief in the presence of the Word in 
Humanity ; the belief in all those in different ages have taught men the 
truth ; the belief in that wisdom which is the Religion in which alone is 



144 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

safety ; the belief in the goodness of God, and in another life after this, 
and the reward or punishment that will there be decreed. The second is 
that of the preservation of Friendship among Brethren ; to remember 
them in their needs and sorrows, and to love them whether they be near 
unto or far from us ; to respect with manly self respect our superiors ; 
to be gracious and kind to all those who are below us, and sustain them 
both secretly and publicly, giving them their due rights, whether 
temporal or spiritual, and proving ourselves to be their true Friends. 
Tlie thiid is that of the abandonment of the worship of idols, formed in 
the mind by false and distorted conceptions of God, and seen with 
slavish superstition in the symbols which have usurped the places of the 
things symbolized and become the objects of an ignorant reverence, and 
the fruitful source of false and impure religions. It is also that of the 
abandonment of the doctrine of those who believe in legends and fables, 
and of those who say that God is not present everywhere, in symphathy 
with His creatures, but somewhere remote from them, where He looks 
unconcernedl}' on and sees the action of the Universe, and its forces, 
both of matter and intellect, proceeding under the operation of 'laws' 
enacted by Him, which make his personal intervention and concern and 
interest unnecessary. It is also that of the abandonment of the doctrine 
of those who believe in traditions and babble nonsense, and say that 
God is not one. The Jourth is that of the disbelief in Evil Spirits in 
rebellion and antagonism against the one God. The Fifth is that of 
implicit truth and confidence in God, as infinitely merciful and loving, 
and of that worship of Him which has rested in every age and genera- 
tion on the belief that He has personality bj^ Unit}- of Will and 
Wisdom, but without body, form or shape, or confinement within limits ; 
b}^ imagining which men make a God after their own image, conceiving 
of themselves as infinitely magnified, and fancying this conception to be 
God. The sixth is that of being satisfied with the acts of God, whatever 
they may be, not endeavoring to avoid the operation of His laws, or 
condemning as wrong or criminal anything whatsoever that is done in 
obedience to them, as the}- appear and act in Nature and Humanity. 
And the seventh is that of resignation, cheerful and implicit, to His will, 
even when He afflicts ns with sorrows, and what seem to us cruel and 
unnecessary desolations and deprivations. For in adversity we cannot 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 145 

know what evils and miseries, prosperity might have brought upon us, 
what enmities and slanders, what moral and mental and physical 
diseases ; nor from what extremities of shame and agony, and sufferings, 
and sorrow He may have rescued by death the loved ones whom He has 
taken from us. The conclusion is, that whosoever knows and believes as 
the Seven Laws require, and is sound of mind and bod3^ and of full age, 
and free from servitude, maj' be of those who are destined to the ranks, 
and entitled to be present at the private assemblies, at which whosoever 
is present must revere God and be true, and generous to his Brother and 
whosoever is absent with right to be present will repent it." 

We can learn from these laws of the ancient Druses some very 
beautiful and forcible truths, as sublimely grand as those taught b}^ 
Jesus Himself when He associated with the lowly fishermen of Galilee 
and preached the beatitudes throughout the Holy Land. They embody 
many of those eternal verities that have descended to us from the Wis- 
dom Religion of the '' Land of the Vedas," taught to the aspirants in the 
Indian, Mazdean and ancient Egyptian mysteries during the ceremonies 
of Initiation. They are exemplified to-day in the profound symbolog}' of 
our glorious Scottish Rite throughout the world universal. Brothers of 
our obedience should give especial attention to The Conclusion. The}^ in 
themselves should remind us of our duties to our Lodges, Chapters, 
Councils and Consistories. Therefore adorn your Lodge with your 
presence. 



10 



^(i:iwiilturc-iIrri9atwn-1lotus-i3aj>|)ius, 



147 



■Cbc waters flow o'er the burning soil, 

Of old €gypt*9 harvest bearing land, 
Hnd the fellaheen's tash and daily toil 
Is to direet it from the flowing JVile 
Co the parched and thirsty sand 

SIbere cotton, com and the bean flowers grow 

In luxuriant abundance around, 
"Che dikes and ditches that continually flow, 
Slherc the sturdy fellaheen plies his hoc, 

Co direct it over the ground. 



148 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 149 



CHAPTER VII. 

AGRICULTURE— IRRIGATION-LOTUS— PAPYRUS. 

(5 1 HE agricultural part of Egypt is divided into what is known as 
ejJL /?ai and Sharaki lands. The former is that portion of the soil 
subject to the annual inundations of the waters of the Nile, without any- 
other assistance than in directing the course of the flooding turbid waters 
to where it is needed for irrigating the land over which it flows. The 
Rai land produces only one natural crop, but it can be made to yield a 
second, or even a third, if properly irrigated and attended. The Sharaki 
land is that particular part of the soil which requires artificial irrigation, 
for without water nothing would grow thereon, as it lies above the 
flooding waters of the river ; therefore to make it produce abundantly, it 
is necessary to irrigate these parts by various methods, such as the 
Shaduf, Sakiyeh, Tabut and pumps, comprising machines that lift the 
water to the desired height for irrigating the soil. 

The seasons are divided into three parts, of four months each. The 
most important of all is the Winter Season {es Shitawi) which com- 
mences at the end of the inundation, or somewhere about the first of 
November, in Middle Egypt, and ends in the last days of February. 
During the early part of this season the whole of the Delta presents a 
very peculiar appearance, for it looks exactly like an immense checker- 
board of water, whose dividing lines are the banks of the canals through 
which the waters of the Nile flow to all parts of Lower Egypt. Here 
and there, above the flooded country, stand villages, surrounded by 
clusters of palms and occasionally sycamores, that relieve the monotony 
of the scene. 

As soon as the waters begin to subside and the fields are still moist, 
the staple food of the Egyptians is sown, as well as what is necessary for 
the use of their domestic animals, such as wheat, barley, beans, chick- 
peas, clover, vetches, etc. This seed is scattered broadcast upon the soft 



150 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

wet soil, and pressed into it bj^ various very simple methods, one of wliicli 
is by driving tbeir domestic animals across the seeded soil. Sometimes 
they do not go to that trouble; but just leave the seed lying upon the 
surface of the soft wet mud or ground, when, by its own weight, it 
sinks beneath the surface and under the conditions of heat, light and 
moisture, very soon germinates and begins to grow luxuriantly and in 
abundance. 

All sowing is done in the same old primitive way as in the time 
-when Moses lived, and that is " by hand." The sower fills his basket 
full of seed, then slings it upon his shoulder and scatters it broadcast 
upon the wet shimmering soil. About four months from the time of 
sowing the seed, they begin to harvest the beans, lupins, clover, etc. ; 
but the wheat and barley will take fully three months longer to mature 
and ripen, ready for harvesting, which is done in a very primitive 
manner, according to the ancient methods of their great ancestors. 
They either pull up the stocks b}- the roots, or cut them oft" with a sickle 
or knife, close to the ground, and pile them in a heap in the middle of 
the field. They then hitch up a couple of oxen to a " norag " (a kind of 
sled that rests upon a heavv roller, with sharp pieces of iron fastened 
to it) which is then driven over the pile, backwards and forwards, bruising 
and crushing the stalks and freeing the grain from the husk. The}^ 
then gather up the larger parts of the stalks and throw them aside. 
The grain is separated from the husks and rubbish b}^ throwing the 
crushed pile up into the wind ; when the light chaff is blown awaj^ and 
the grain falls to the ground, after which it is gathered up and stored 
for future use. 

The Summer Season — es Seffi, begins with the month of March and 
ends in June. Ver}' little is raised in Upper Egj'pt during this season, 
as during the whole of the time the cultivable land is very narrow and 
the greater portion nearl}' always under water, though they do raise 
considerable produce in many places. There are large quantities of 
millet, cucumbers, melons, etc., raised during this time, and they sow a 
great deal of sugar-cane during the commencement of this season ; but 
it is not harvested, for conversion into sugar, until the latter part of 
Januar}' or the middle of Februar}^, although they cut large quantities 
for eating during the month of October. In Lower Egypt, or the Delta, 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 151 

the summer season is a very important one, for then is the time they 
plant indigo, cotton, rice, etc., which is harvested generally between the 
months of October and December. They plant cotton in April and then 
harvest it in November, and frequently reap quite a large amount from 
a second crop of this plant. This season is when their tobacco crop 
is harvested, of which they grow large quantities. Now is the farmer's 
delight in the Delta, as the whole of this part of Egypt is clothed in 
luxuriant vegetation, the gardens and fields are all laden with fruits that 
gladden the hearts of men. As far as the eye can reach we may see 
luxuriant crops of all kinds growing and ripening. 

The Autumn Season, {ed Deviira^ begins with the rising or 
inundation of the Nile during the month of July, and ends in October. 
In the middle of this season the Delta was formerly covered with the 
flooding, rushing waters of the Nile, bearing out the statement which 
Herodotus makes in Book II, Chapter 97 : " When the Nile overflows, 
the country is converted into a sea, and nothing appears but the cities, 
which look like the islands in the ^gean. At this season boats no 
longer keep the course of the river, but sail right across the plain. On 
the voyage from Naucratis to Memphis, at this season, you pass close to 
the Pyramids, whereas the usual course is by the apex of the Delta and 
the city of Cercasorus. You can sail also from the maritime town of 
Kanopus across the flat to Naucratis, passing by the cities Anthylla and 
Archandropolis . ' ' 

During this season of the year corn is planted with millet, etc. 
And although it is a very short season, of but a little over seventy days, 
yet, during that time the fertile soil of the Delta matures and ripens the 
immense fields of growing grain, which is harvested somewhere about 
the latter part of September or the beginning of October. This season 
is really a harvesting time, not only of corn, millet, etc., but of all that 
which had been planted during the summer. At this time of the year 
(September) the Delta presents to view smiling fields of waving grain, 
when every spot of arable land is teeming in fertility, from Alexandria 
to Cairo. It will be a scene never to be forgotten by all those who travel 
through the Delta of the Nile during the latter part of Autumn. 

There is a vast difference to-day in the inundations of the river 
Nile from those of ancient times ; for now they are able to control, in a 



152 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

great measure, the flooding waters of old " God Nilus ; " thanks to the 
efforts of Mohammed Ali, Ishmail Pasha and the British, in constructing 
places for the purpose of storing the surplus waters of the river, so 
as to distribute it when and where it would be most needed. 

Mohammed Ali endeavored to build a barrage in order to preserve 
the surplus waters of the river. The construction of the dam was 
in charge of Mogul Bey, a Frenchman, who worked upon it for years, 
in the hope of making it a success ; but it ultimately proved a miserable 
failure. The British afterwards reconstructed it and made it thoroughly 
secure. During their early occupation of this country they devoted 
a great deal of time and attention to this matter and appropriated 
considerable sums of money toward improvements along these lines, and 
to-day they have very nearly completed two most magnificent dams, of 
which I make mention in another chapter, to regulate the river's flow 
and reclaim a vast amount of desert land destined to support an addi- 
tional population of from one to two millions of people. The prosperity 
of Egypt depends upon the storage of the water and controlling the 
flow of the river which runs to waste during the winter, and for that 
reason the 'British are constructing these enormous dams to prevent 
loss and utilize every gallon of water needed for irrigation. 

The river Nile has created tlie soil of Egypt through its annual 
inundations, by depositing layer after layer of alluvial deposits brought 
down from the mountains of Abyssinia. 

Herodotus says, in Book II, Chapter 4 : " That the priests told him 
that when Mm (Menes) was King, all Egypt, except the Thebaic canton 
was a marsh, and that none of the land below lake Moeris then showed 
itself above the water. This is a distance of seven days' sail from the 
sea up the river." 

In Chapter 5 : " Wiat they said of their country seemed to me very 
reasonable. For any one who sees Eg5'pt without having heard a word 
about it before, must perceive, if he has only common powers of observa- 
tion, that the Egypt to which the Greeks go, in their ships, is an acquired 
country, the gift of the river. The same is true of the land above the 
lake, to the distance of three days' voyage, concerning which the Egyp- 
tians say nothing, but which is exactly the same kind of coiintr}'. The 
following is the general character of the region : In the first place, by 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 153 

sea, when you are still a days' sail from land, if you let down a sounding- 
line you will bring up mud and find j-ourself in eleven fathoms of water, 
which shows that the soil washed down by the stream extends to that 
distance." 

In Chapter 7. — " From the coast inland, as far as Heliopolis, the 
breadth of Eg3^pt is considerable, the country is flat, without springs 
and full of swamps. The length of the route, from the sea up to 
Heliopolis, is almost exactly the same as that of the road which runs 
from the altar of the twelve gods at Athens, to the temple of the 
Olympian Jove at Pisa. If a person made a calculation he would find 
but very little difference between the two routes, not more than about 
fifteen furlongs ; for the road from Athens to Pisa falls short of fifteen 
hundred furlongs by exactly fifteen, whereas the distance of Heliopolis 
from the sea is just the round numbers." 

Fraas, quoted by Baedeker, in his "Lower Egj'pt," says: "Through- 
out the whole of Egypt the Nile mud rests on a bed of sea sand. The 
whole country between the first cataract and the Mediterranean was 
formerly a narrow estuary, which was probably filled by degrees, 
during the Pleiocene period with lagoon deposits, washed down from the 
crystalline Habesh. At a later period, when Egypt had risen from the 
sea, and after the isthmus had been formed, the river forced itself 
through these deposits of mud, sweeping away many of these loose 
particles at one place and depositing them again farther down." 

Now, from my own personal observations, I do most firmly believe 
that at one time all that country, knov/n as the Delta, was an estuary, 
and the river itself has been for ages bringing down a sedimentary 
deposit to build up this most important part of Egypt, the " Delta of the 
Nile," and continually renews it, by fresh accumulations, at every inun- 
dation or overflow of this remarkable old river, thus maititaining it, in a 
perpetual state of fertility, through the rich alluvial soil that is continu- 
ally deposited upon the land by the flooding waters of the Nile. 

After the Delta of the Nile had been formed, in the ancient days of 
Egj^ptian history, it was watered by seven different branches of the river, 
while to-day only two make their exit into the Mediterranean Sea by their 
regular channels, these two being known as the Bolbetiiie and the 
Phatnitic. The first is called the Rosett-a branch, the other one is known 



154 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

as the Damietta branch of the Nile while the other five, the Kanopic, 
Mendesian, Sebennytic, Pelusiac, and Tanitic, are of but very little use or 
importance, except for irrigation purposes, as they are nearly always dry ; 
but are kept open simply for carrying water for irrigation. 

The Bolbetine branch took its name from the ancient town of 
Bolbitiinim. The ancient site of this town lies about a couple of miles 
South of the modern town of Rosetta, in Arabic Rashid^ founded by one 
of the Caliphs of the Tiilunide Dynasty, probably Ahmed-ibn-Tuliin. It 
was formerly a very important and flourishing town of great commercial 
interest, to that branch of the Nile on which it stood, as well as the coun- 
try tributary to it. At the present time- its harbors are filled with the 
Nile deposit and only vessels of the smallest draft are enabled to enter ; 
in fact, since the completion of the Mahmudiyeh canal, opened on the 
2oth day of Januar}', 1820, its importance began to decline, and its traffic 
diverted to the city of Alexandria. This town of Rosetta, at the beginning 
of the present century, had a population of between twenty-five and 
thirt}^ thousand inhabitants, while at the present writing it has dwindled 
down to a population of less than one half of those figures. It is a very 
pleasant Arab town, chiefly celebrated for its gardens, then the principal 
attraction to the better class of Europeans as well as native Egyptians 
from interior cities. It was formerly a favorite summer resort, on account 
of the salubrity of the atmosphere and its picturesque beauty. There are 
several large mosques and khans in this town, as well as the typical 
bazaar of Egypt, the whole being surrounded by a wall with loopholes 
that have been cut at regular places for the purpose of firing through, in 
case of an attack from invaders ; but these walls would be of very little 
use if opposed to artillery fire. This city is also celebrated for the dis- 
covery of the famous trilingual stone, which was found here by a French 
officer while digging the foundation of Fort St. Julian. It is now in the 
British Museum, and is known as the " Rosetta Stone." 

Off to the west of Rosetta and in plain sight is the bay' of Abu-kir 
whereon was fought the celebrated " Battle of the Nile," on the first day 
of August, in, the year 1798. Admiral Lord Nelson, while cruising along 
the coast discovered the French ships at anchor, which he immediately 
engaged, totally destroying fourteen vessels out of the seventeen compos- 
ing the fleet under command of Admiral Brueys. The completion of the 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 155 

victory was iu the destruction of the L'Orient, commanded b}' the French 
Admiral himself. The destruction of this ship and fleet destroyed the 
power of the French and caused Napoleon to hurriedly return to Europe. 
Shortly afterwards Sir Ralph Abercrombie effected a landing at the battle 
of Alexandria, which, with the capitulation of Cairo, compelled the French 
to evacuate Eg3'pt and return to France, very much demoralized at their 
losses. Sir Ralph Abercrombie was killed during the battle of Alexan- 
dria. East of the town of Rosetta is Lake Barulos which I shall 
speak of later on. 

The Phatnitic branch of the Nile flows into the Mediterranean just 
west of the most northerly part of Lake Menzala, and the town of 
Dainietta is situated on the east bank of the river, where it was once 
noted as being the most important town on the east side of the river and 
originally contained a population of about forty-five thousand inhabitants. 
Like its companion town Rosetta, it has fallen in importance through the 
growth of Alexandria and later Port Said, and to-day it has a population 
of about twenty-five thousand. This town was known to the ancient 
Egyptians as TamiatJiis, when it was considered to be the Key to the 
Delta, during the crusades especiall}-. Its principal revenues are 
derived from the manufacturing of leather and cloth, while the fishing 
' industry enables its inhabitants to keep up a lucrative trade with 
the interior cities. The town lies due west of Lake Menzala and the ex- 
treme shallowness of its waters prevent vessels from entering the harbor ; 
but there is some talk of cutting a canal to connect the Mediterranean 
Sea with the river Nile. If this were done it would no doubt restore a 
great deal of the trade lost through the difficulties of keeping the port 
open, that shipping could enter, discharge, and take on their cargoes 
for other ports. 

The Delta of the Nile still preserves the same fan-like tract of land, 
lying between Alexandria and Port Said on the North, and Cairo at the 
apex of the Delta, on the South. From this last mentioned city the Delta 
begins to widen out into a regular fan-like formation, beginning at Lake 
Mareotis on the East, in about 30° East longitude, and ending with parts 
of the land extending into and helping to form, with Port Said and the 
Suez Canal, Lake Menzala, in about 32° East longitude. This land, 
roughly estimated, consists of about one hundred and sixty-five miles, 



156 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

running from iVlexandria along the coast line, while the apex of the Delta 
lies very near Cairo, in aboitt 32° North latitude, being distant from 
Alexandria nearly two hundred miles by river and one hundred and 
twenty-three b}' rail. The Delta has an area of about six thousand three 
hundred and fifty square miles, comprising good agricultural land. Its 
lack of woods and forests is one of its noticeable features. There is quite 
a number of trees to be seen in Lower Egj^pt but the most common is 
the date palm, which is cultivated and especiall}' cared for on account of 
its fruit. 

Mr. Poole, in his very interesting work on Egypt, says, on pages 31 
and 32 : "The interior of the Delta is a' wide level plain, intersected by 
a network of canals, fed b}' the divided stream of the Nile, often running 
in ancient channels and fenced in by high embankments. The whole 
plain is clothed with rich crops of all manner of vegetation and the 
whole lit up with the snow-white blossoms of the cotton plant. Near 
the banks of the canals and river-arms are some three hundred small 
villages and a few towns, generall}- erected high above the inundation, 
on the lofty mounds of dark earth, the sites of ancient cities and temples, 
which are a prominent feature of the plain. At a distance the villages 
look almost a part of the mounds, for the most part merel}- a cluster of 
mud-huts surrounded by dove-cotes and palm groves, M'ith a white-washed 
minaret standing out from the confused mass ; but mau}^ of these 
villages take a fair share in the trade which the fertilizing Nile affords 
to the plain, and have developed into small birt populous towns. They 
can be seen in every stage of progress, from the huddled head of 
mud-huts, piled up by the fellaheen who work the neighboring water- 
wheel, and sow the fields around, through the open door-holes of which 
the wretched poverty of the Eg3'ptian peasant is plainl}^ visible, to the 
well-to-do town, which boasts something like a definite street, and several 
mosques, where minarets overtop the houses and necessar}- palms. 
Houses and hovels are built of the same material, the inevitable Nile 
mud, though for the better houses in damp regions the bricks are baked, 
a precaution unknown in the villages higher up. 

" The principal towns of the interior are — Demen-hur (" City of 
Horus"), west of the Rosetta branch, with a populatiou of twenty-five 
thousand, possessed of considerable factories for cleaning cotton and 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 157 

preparing it for export, as well as El Mansurah, on tlie Damietta 
branch, the scene of the defeat of Jean de Brienne by a nephew of 
Saladin in 1221, and the prison of Saint Louis in 1250, at the disastrous 
termination of the sixth crusade. Tanta, between the two, a fine town 
of thirt_v thousand inhabitants, famous for its Saint Atnad El-Bedawy 
and his annual festivals, improperlj- but appositely called fairs, that are 
held for a week and a day in Januar}*, April and August. The last 
and greatest of these festivals bring together half a million people 
to honor the Saint and obtain benefits for themselves from his inter- 
cession, as well as to enjo}' the tricks of the jugglers, the dancing of the 
Ghawaz}^, and the fun and revelry which are the main characteristics of 
this religious festival. Ez-Zaqaziq, with fort}' thousand inhabitants, is the 
centre of the cotton trade of the Delta, situated in the midst of a fertile 
and wooded region, watered b}- a fine system of canals, and supporting a 
prosperous farming population. Near Ez-Zaqaziq runs the Fresh Water 
Canal which convcN'S the Nile water to Suez. This canal is of ancient 
construction and was built by the Pharaohs, perhaps four thousand years 
ago, and reopened by M de Lesseps to give drinking water to the work- 
men engaged upon the Suez Canal. It is now connected with Cairo by 
the Ismailia Canal and runs through the Wad}- Tumilat, which it 
fertilizes by its water, and after reaching Ismailia turns down to Suez. 
Though principally an aqueduct it is also serviceable for local traffic." 

There are quite a number of towns in the Delta I have already 
written about, such as Sais, Tanis or Zoan, Bubastis, Semmenud, and 
others that could be described ; but one town in the Delta is, in a 
measure, typical of all the rest, and therefore a description of them would 
simply be a mere repetition of words. 

In approaching the apex of the Delta we are enabled to see the 
Libyan range of mountains and the Mokattum hills, drawing closer 
tog-ether. In the middle distance the dark foliage marks the site of 
" Grand Cairo," with its citadel, splendid mosques and minarets, whose 
gorgeous beauties have been so highly praised by all Arabian writers, 
as well as b\' man}' modern historians. To say anything regarding its 
varied charms and beauties not already described would, indeed, be a 
difiScult task ; but as all people do not see alike, I will leave my descrip- 
tion of this peculiar city and its environs for a future chapter, and tell 



158 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

yoii what impressed nie wliile sojourning in that quaint okl city, the 
capital of Kgypt. From our present view we can see very plainly the 
pyramids in the plains of Gizeh and the solitar}^ obelisk that marks the 
site of the celebrated city of Heliopolis, " The cit}- of the Sun," of which 
I shall speak later on. 

There are five lakes of brackish water sitiiated in the northern part 
of the Delta, which are separated from the Mediterranean Sea by long 
and narrow ridges of sand, through man}- of which the salt water filters 
and mixes with the fresh water of the river Nile during the overflow. 
The first is Lake Mareotis, not far from the city of Alexandria. In fact, 
after leaving this city by the Gabari Gate the lake is right beside us. 
In the winter the waters of this lake are high, owing to the inundation; 
but later on are surrounded by a vast area of swampy, ill-smelling bog- 
land, pregnant with malaria, etc. At one time this lake was not near so 
large as at present, and during the summer months is a disagreeable 
marsh. It was originally a fertile plain, with a beautiful lake of fresh, 
clear, pure Avater in the centre ; from which the citj- of Alexandria 
drew her water supply. When the British laid siege to this cit}^, 
in the year iSoi, they cut off the water snppl}'' from Alexandria by 
digging an immense ditch from the AlediteiTanean Sea into the low 
land adjoining the lake, which not onlv flooded the country but 
destroyed the lake and a very large number of villages dotting" the 
plain around it, thus sacrificing a great number of lives, bxit they 
succeeded in capturing Alexandria. 

Lake Abukir originally belonged to and formed part of Mareotis, 
but when IMohammed Ali constructed the Mahmndiyeh canal in iSig 
he threw up very high embankments which cut off" the northern por- 
tion, entirely separating it from IMareotis, as the canal ran right through 
it to Alexandria. 

Mnrray, on page 196, says this canal " received its name in honor 
of the Sultan Mahmnd second. The cost is said to have 'been three 
hundred thousand pounds ; and two hundred and fifty thousand men 
were emploj'ed about one year in digging it, of whom twenty thousand 
perished by accident, hunger and plague. It commences at the village 
of Atfih, on the Rosetta branch of the Nile, and has a total length of 
fifty miles, with an average width of about one hundred feet. A part 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 159 

of its course is identical with that of the ancient Kanopic branch of 
the Nile, and the old canal of Fiia, which was used in the time of 
the Venitians for carrying goods to Alexandria, and existed, though 
nearly dry, in Savary's time, A. D. 1777. The right bank of the 
Mahraiidiyeh Canal is bordered for some distance with the houses and 
gardens of the wealthy inhabitants of Alexandria." 

This part of the lake, at certain seasons of the year, is a very 
unhealthy place, a fact evidenced by the great number of men who died 
from the baneful influence of this part of the Delta during the con- 
struction of the Mahmudiyeh Canal. This branch of the Nile is the 
most westerly, and flows into the Abukir Bay, close to where the 
British destroyed the French fleet at the battle of the Nile. 

It was upon the west bank of this arm of the Nile (Kanopic) that 
the town of Kanopus was located, and it is said to have derived its name 
from the pilot of Menelaus, who sailed to that place on his return from 
the siege of Troy. Strabo describes this town as follows : " Kanopus is 
a city which lies one hundred and twenty stadia (about fourteen English 
miles) from Alexandria, if one goes by land, and is named after the 
helmsman of Menelaus who died there. It contains the highly revered 
temple of Serapis, which, moreover, works such miracles that even the 
most respectable men believe in them, and either sleep in it them- 
selves, or get others to sleep there for them. Some persons also record 
the cures, and others the effects of the oracle dreams experienced 
there. A particularly remarkable thing is the great number of parties 
of pleasure descending the canal from Alexandria ; for day and night 
the canal swarms with men and women, who perform music on the 
flute and licentious dances in the boats with unbridled merriment, or 
who, at Kanopus itself, frequent taverns situated on the canal and 
suited for such amusement and revelry." 

This city was noted for several temples, the chief of which was 
that of Serapis. This deity was worshipped here with the most pro- 
found respect. The Kanopic jars, which I shall describe in the chapter 
devoted to embalming, owe their name to this place. It was here that 
the celebrated trilingual stone called by the French savants " La Pierre 
de San " especially refers to what was known as the " Decree of 
Kanopus." 



160 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Directly east of Abukir is a long stretch of sand, separating it 
from Lake Edku, another body of brakish water of no especial interest. 
The ford which connects this lake with the sea is supposed by many 
to be the ancient Kanopic mouth of the river Nile. It is separated 
from the Mediterranean by a long drear}^ waste of sand, along which 
runs the railroad to Rosetta, lying to the northeast of Edku, and 
beyond the Bolbitinic branch of the Nile is Lake Brulus, situated 
between the two towns of Rosetta and Damietta. The Sebennytic 
mouth of the Nile empties into the sea from this lake, in about 
31° east longitude and very near the long sandy ridge which divides 
it from the Mediterranean Sea. 

The last of this series of lakes is Menzala, the most extensive 
lake in Egypt, an immense , swamp at certain seasons, having an 
area of about five hundred thoiisand acres. It is a shallow lake, 
drifting off into marshy creeks, dotted here and there with number- 
less islands, many of which are flooded and disappear entirely during 
the inundations of the river, a most desolate region, pregnant with 
fever, etc. There are two ancient mouths of the Nile that flow into 
the sea from this lake, known as the Mendesian and Tanitic. A 
few of the islands in this lake will prove of great interest to the 
student and tourist. The principal ones are Tuna and Tennes. The 
first contains a small village called Shekh Abdullah, where there are 
some very interesting ruins. 

Tennes is the ancient site of Tennesus, and contains a great 
many remains of vaulted tombs, baths and foundations that were 
constructed by the ancient Romans, after Egypt became tributary 
to the imperial power of Rome. 

All through northern Eg3'pt, in the vicinity of these lakes, are 
the grazing lands of the Egyptians, each of which furnish a very 
good field for the hunter; but one desirous of this privilege must first 
secure a permit before he is allowed to look across the sights of 
either gun or rifle. On all these lakes wild-fowl of varous kinds 
are to be found in abundance, such as wild duck, geese, coot, peli- 
can, silver heron, flamingo, cormorant, etc. In many of these streams 
certain parts are especially reserved, where no shooting is allowed, except- 
ing to those paying for the privilege. I have spent many glorious days 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 161 

— aye, and weeks, — hunting on the lakes Menzala, Bruins and others, 
where many birds of all kinds were secured, and nearly devoured 
alive, at night in our tent, by the bloodthirsty mosquitos. During 
our hunting expeditions over these lakes we had a couple of good 
English punts, belonging to a friend, who had purchased them from 
an English captain for the express purpose of hunting. They were 
of very light draught and far superior to the old-fashioned, unwieldy 
Arab boats generally used here by sportsmen. 

One thing seemed very strange to me, I did not see a single 
specimen of the papyrus plant during my ramblings through the 
whole of Lower Egypt. It used to be carefully cultivated by the 
ancient Egyptians, and grew in great abundance all over the Delta, 
more especially in those branches of the Nile and the streams flow- 
ing from them through this part of the country. The raising and 
manufacturing of papyrus into rolls was, at one time, a distinguish- 
ing industry in Semmenud. 

Ebbers, in his article on the " Writing Materials of Antiquity," says, 
quoting Professor Schenk, in reply to inquiries asking his opinion upon 
the preparation of the specimens submitted to him : " I believe I am cor- 
rect in the opinion that in the preparation, thinner or thicker lamella 
were cut from the inner texture or pith, and these were laid upon each 
other in such wise that the fibers crossed, the finer sorts being prepared 
of two and the rougher kinds out of three lamella ; the thickness thus 
differing with the variety. They were then united by an adhesive sub- 
stance, of what nature I can give no definite information. Its solubility 
in potash seems to indicate the use of the white of an egg, and possibly 
this alone was employed. 

" Rolls and pieces of the different sort of papyrus used for writing 
materials are preserved in large quantities. The last decade has wit- 
nessed the most surprising increase in their numbers. As the result of 
thorough study, not of the writings with which they are covered, but of 
the papyri themselves. Professor U. Wilcken, of Breslau, discovered on 
which side of the papyrus the true page of the writing lay. It is invaria- 
bly the one which, pending the fabrication, has lain uppermost and whose 
fibers, being laid upon the table, occupy a horizontal position ; that page 
of the leaf on which the fibers run vertically is the reverse side. Thus 
11 



162 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

on the page with the horizontal fibers, generally the smoother and better 
finished, which is recognizable at the first glance, the text was begun. 
That which is written on the reverse side may be the end of the writing, 
for which there was insufiicient space on the principal page, or it may be 
a later addition. Thousands of papyri have confirmed this observation. 

" Also the horizontal side is the one originally destined to be written 
upon. This can scarcely be otherwise, as from all the manipvilations of 
its fabrications — pressure, beating smooth, etc., — the upper side derived a 
much better finish than the one upon the table. Reversing the half- 
finished page, with a view to a similar treatment of both sides is 
unknown. The importance of the discovery rests in the fact that, when 
a papyrus is written on both sides, the writing on the horizontal side may 
be declared the more ancient. For example if a dated letter or contract 
is found on the vertical side, and on the horizontal the epigramme of a 
poet, the period of which we do not know, we may venture to assert that 
the poet lived prior to the date on the vertical side. 

'' Among the various kinds of papyrus the most excellent were those 
on which, in time of the Pharaohs, hieratic texts were inscribed and 
Strabo mentions the hieratic papyri as the best of all. It may perhaps be 
the same sort which was called, after the Emperor Augustus, 'the 
Augustinian.' Connected with this is another, which was called ' Liviana' 
after the Empress Livia, the consort of Octavia. Others were named 
from the places of their origin as Saitic, Tanitic, etc., or according to their 
uses as theatre programmes, wrapping paper, etc." 

Many important discoveries of papyri have been made in Upper 
Egypt during the nineteenth century. To-da}^ a vast amount of manu- 
scripts pertaining to science, etc., are being found, which are proving of 
great value and interest to the scientific world in their investigations 
throughout the whole of this most extraordinary country. The papyrus 
was one of the most useful plants cultivated by the Egyptians. The 
roots and young shoots, as well as parts of the stem, were used as food 
in lieu of grain, to supply its want among the poorer classes of the Delta. 
Other parts were used for making baskets, mats, etc., while the stems were 
bound together and used for rafting purposes on the river and streams. 
The name of this plant became famous in the histor}'- of civilization for 
the manner in which writing material was manufactured out of its pith. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 163 

The papyrus was, as I have previously stated, found in great abund- 
ance principally in the lakes and watercourses of the Delta. In conse- 
quence of this it became the hieroglyphic symbol of Lower Egypt, as well 
as adjacent countries, while the lotus was far more prolific in Upper 
Kgypt and was used to symbolize that country as well as Nubia and the 
bordering nations. The lotus is found carved upon every temple through- 
out the length and breadth of the valle}^ of the Nile. Isis is invariably 
represented holding a lotus flower in one hand, while in the other she 
carries the crux ansata. 

In the " Secret Doctrine," Vol. I, section 8, page 406, we find that 
" There are no ancient symbols without a deep and philosophical meaning 
attached to them, their importance and significance increasing with their 
antiquity. Such is the lotus. It is the flower sacred to Nature and her 
God, and represents the abstract and concrete universe, standing as the 
emblem of the productive powers of both spiritual and physical nature. 
It was held as sacred from the remotest antiquit}^ b}^ the Aryan Hindus, 
the Egyptians, and by the Buddhists after them. It was revered in 
China and Japan and adopted as a Christian emblem by the Greek 
and Latin churches, who made of it a messenger, as do now the Chris- 
tians who have replaced it with the water lily. 

'' In the Christian religion, in every picture of the annunciation, 
Gabriel, the Archangel, appears to the Virgin Mary holding in his hand 
a spray of water lilies. This spray typifying Fire and Water, or the idea 
of creation and generation, symbolizes precisely the same idea as the 
Lotus in the hand of Bodhisattva who announces to Maha Maya, Gua- 
tama's Mother, the birth of Buddha, the world's Saviour. Thus, also, 
were Osiris and Horns constantly represented b}' the Egyptians in asso- 
ciation with the Lotus-flower, both being Sun Gods, or Gods of Fire ; 
just as the Holy Ghost is still typified by ' tongues of fire ' in the Ac/s.''' 

" I,ove came to Flora asking for a flower, 

That would of flowers be undisputed queen ; 
The L,ily and the rose long, long had been 

Rivals for that high honor. 
And Flora gave the Lotus ' rose-red ' dyed, 

And ' lyilh^ white ' the queenliest flower that blows." 

— Ceiitury Magazine. 



1<34 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

The Lotus has been exalted and religiously venerated by the 
Hindus, in the ancient days, as well as by all nations of the world, 
down to the Christians of to-day. Throughout the East, in prehistoric 
times, as well as the present, this flower was the theme of the poet. Its 
praise has been spoken and sung in every age and every land of the far 
East, immortalized in song and story. In our day Heine^ Temjysoii^ and 
Sir Edwin Arnold have rendered homage in raphsodies of song to this 
flower of the " Land of the Vedas " and the glorious East. 

This magnificent flower, emblem of the human soul, at whose birth 
the spotless purity of its glorious petals repelled the impurities from 
which it sprung. The muddj' waters, coming in contact with its virgin 
blossoms, leaves or buds, roll back from them, leaving no stain. In the 
same way the pure in heart are impervious to the stain of sin, though 
surrounded by evil thoughts and evil deeds which permeate this world, 
as never resting upon or entering into the heart of the pure and true. 
Flowers of many varieties are found in all parts of Egypt which are called 
by the name of the Lotus, though none of them are the inie or sacred 
flower of the Hindu or Buddhist. They are simply different species of 
the water lil}^ having attached to them no sacred traditions. 

The Egyptian Lotus is not the sacred Lotus of India; but very 
nearly approaches that glorious flower in its general characteristics. 
There are many Lotus-like flowers in Eg3'pt of various hues, which rise 
out of the water at sunrise and disappear again at the setting of the sun. 
Many of the so-called Lotuses have been mistaken for N. Ncluinbo the 
sacred flower of India. But it is not to be found in any part of Egypt. 
The Nymphaca Lotus, and Nymphaca ceni/ea are found in great quanti- 
ties in both L^pper and Lower Egypt, but as previously stated are not the 
sacred flower, the great brilliant rose-pink, the matchless Lotus of the 
Hindu and Buddhist, the royal lily of Siam. The true sacred Lotus of 
India is the universal symbol of the Kosmos, as the absolute totalit}^, and 
the jewel is spiritual Man or God, and " Otn Mam' Padnic Hum^'' (O the 
jewel in the Lotus) points to the indissoluble union between Man and the 
Universe. 

The full-grown Lotus flower is larger and more brilliant by far than 
the smaller and more compact water lily. It has not the stainless purity 
of the white lily, nor the rich, deep, ruby color of the darker lily, but its 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 165 

own brilliant rose-pink is matchless, unapproachable. The English heart 
goes out to it, reminded by its color-tone of the delicate brier-roses at 
home, and like the brier-rose its days are short. The petals that were 
perfect yesterday, are to-day parting and falling into the pool. But as 
they fall they reveal the most curious and botanically the most interest- 
ing of all the Lotus charms. This is the unique " receptacle " or fruit 
case, whose peculiarities at once distinguish the Nelumbian from the 
water lily. This receptacle occupies the central position in the flower, 
and the golden threads which surround it when the flower is in full 
bloom, fade away when the petals fall, and the receptacle is left alone on 
the top of the flower stalk. It is shaped like a boy's peg-top, with the 
narrow point downwards, and the broad circular end uppermost. The 
little fruits commonly called " seed " are immersed separately from its 
neighbors in this spongy receptacle. Now this is wholly a different state 
of things from those found in the water lily. There the little fruits, 
although individually free their entire length, are inclosed in a hollow 
case, and can thus touch each other. The degree of freedom is of course 
greater in the Lotus, where each little fruit has its own circle, instead of 
living in one large dormitory, with many other families, as the water lily 
carpels have to do. But in one respect, at any rate, the fruits of the water 
lily and the Lotus are alike — " they are all very wholesome eating." 

The bulb of the Egyptian Lotus is very sweet and wholesome, and 
the seeds, when taken from the ciboriuvi or capsule, are ground into 
flour and mixed with either milk or water. Baked in the same \\-a.y as 
bread, and eaten warm, fresh from the oven, it is considered very whole- 
some. It supplies the place of corn to the poorer classes throughout 
Egypt, who are unable to obtain that commodity. 

Before leaving the Delta of the Nile, I would like to call the 
attention of my readers to the natural chain of lakes that run from the 
Mediterranean Sea to the Gulf of Suez. First comes Menzala, next 
Balah, then Timsha and finally the Great Bitter Lakes, and the Gulf 
of Suez reaching down the Red Sea, giving one the impression that 
the two seas were originally connected. I incline to the same opinion, 
in relation to this matter, as Mr. Stanley Lane Poole. He says in his 
work "Egypt," page 113: "The Isthmus of Suez was originally a 
strait, and the only eminence on its low level surface — the hilly 



lUU EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

district called El-Gis7\ or the causeway near the middle — is the result 
of the accumulation of sand produced b}^ the meeting of the two seas, 
aided by the silting up of the country about the Isthmus, which is the 
counterpart of the depression still taking place along the coast of the 
Delta, in spite of the Nile deposit. The silting, however, did not cause 
the drying-up of the entire strait ; but left a series of lakes or salt 
marshes," such as I have spoken of above. 

These salt marshes extending over Lower Egypt are not cultivated, 
but are still valuable for the pasturage of cattle, as luxuriant herbage 
grows here in abundance. The men who herded and attended to the 
raising of stock were a wild, lawless race,- according to Stvabo and other 
historians. They dwelt in the midst of the marshes, upon the margins 
of the lagunes, or brackish lakes, and lived in huts made from the reeds 
and grasses that grew there. They subsisted on the roots of the 
papyrus, lotus and various other esculent plants, together with the 
leguminuous class, such as the lentils, etc., which formed the principal 
portion of their diet. The raising of oxen for agricultural purposes 
unquestionably received careful attention, as both in plowing and in 
treadine out the "rain no other animal was ever used. This f;ict made 
the maintenance of cows and oxen, not alone a necessity for agricultural 
purposes, but as beasts of burden. In the representations upon the walls 
of many of the temples we see cows drawing the sled upon which the 
mummy was conveyed to the tomb, while the stones brought from the 
quarries of Mokattum for the purpose of repairing the Memphian temple 
are represented as being drawn by three pair of oxen. According to the 
ancient paintings and the hieroglyphic inscriptions, I should judge their 
domestic animals were the source of much care and solicitiide. 

The ancient Egyptians also raised great quantities of sheep in the 
Delta, specially for their wool. Their flesh was eaten for food in Lower 
Egypt, but was not used in the Theban Nome, because the ram was held 
sacred to their great god of Thebas. We learn from Diodonls that the 
ewes were very prolific, bearing lambs and 3-ielding wool twice in the 
year. 

Wool, when woven into cloth was prohibited for use as xuider- 
garments, to be worn next the body as is largely done at the present day. 
Outer garments might be made from this staple for the priests or even 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 167 

all classes of people, but under no circumstances was it allowed to be 
worn or even carried into tbeir temples, nor used for tbe purpose of 
embalming or wrapping their mummied dead. 

Goats were raised throughout the whole of Upper and Lower Bgypt 
in great quantities, but the Delta was the special place for raising stock 
of all kinds. After the flooding waters of the Nile had subsided the land 
over which it had flowed would produce a most luxuriant and abundant 
crop of herbage, making this part of Eg3'pt the best place for pas- 
turasfe and the raisinar of domestic animals. 

In many of the tombs throughout the valley of the Nile we find 
paintings representing either the deceased or his overseer taking an 
inventory of the stock upon the farm, or belonging to him, or engaged in 
a tour of inspection for the purpose of numbering the cattle and domestic 
animals. 

I could refer you to mau}^ of the tombs in both Upper and Lower 
Egypt where those engaged in this kind of work are depicted. There is 
one especial tomb at El-Kab, the ancient EileitJiyia, located about five 
hundred and ten miles above Cairo, on the East bank of the river. The 
painting is in the tomb of Paheri at this place, where either the deceased 
or his head-man is engaged in counting the domestic animals, attended 
hy servants and scribe, and the number recorded is as follows : cattle, 
one hundred and twenty-two ; sheep or rams, three hundred ; goats, one 
thousand two hundred ; and swine, one thousand five hundred. I have 
described this tomb in another chapter. 

The paintings in many of these tombs are extremely interesting and 
will ampl}' repaj' those who visit them because they explain a great deal 
of the home life of these ancient people. 

There are two very familiar objects to be seen throughout the valley 
of the Nile, and they are the Shaduf and Sakiyeh, two machines used by 
these people in raising water from the river, for irrigating the land, after 
the waters have subsided. The first is a very simple one, worked by a 
man, to raise the water from the stream below to irrigate the land above. 
The machine is composed of two posts sunk into the ground, standing 
about four or five feet high and about three or four feet apart. On top of 
these two posts is fastened a cross-bar, on which is suspended a sweep 
or pole, something like the well-sweep so common in many parts of this 



168 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

country for drawing water from a well. To one end of this sweep is 
fastened a lump of Nile mud, or clay, and to the other is hung a leathern 
bucket. The sweep hangs directly over an irrigating ditch whose edge 
is protected from the wash of the water and the rub of the bucket by a 
piece of matting. This machine is generally operated by a half-nude 
man. When I say half-nude I mean that he very often wears a calico 
cap or an old fez. He dips the bucket into the water beneath him by 
pulling down the sweep, and filling it, the weight at the other end of 
the pole assists him in raising the bucket to the desired height, so 
that he can pour its contents into the ditch or pool above. Sometimes 
when the river is low and the banks are high, as many as four of these 
machines are required to raise the water to the height of the irrigating 
ditch and direct it to where it is most needed. 

The Sakiych is a more modern arrangement, generally operated 
by oxen, the controlling power of which is a boy, nearly always asleep. 
He is brought into this peculiar hypnotic condition by the continuous 
turning of the oxen and the shrill monotonous creak of the ever-revolving 
wheel. " The Sakiyeh " is a large wheel, to which is fastened a large 
number of ijative earthen jars, which fill with water as the v/heel revolves 
and empty themselves into a wooden box placed to receive the water and 
carry it off for irrigating the fields beyond. The wheel, as I have said, 
is turned by oxen, who go tramping round and round, accompanied by 
the continual shrieking noise of the ungreased bearings of the machine, 
which can be heard for quite a distance, while the boy sits perched up in 
a kind of basket, behind the oxen, nearly always asleep. These are two 
of the very old methods adopted by the ancient Egyptians to raise the 
water for irrigating the land. They also use another kind of machine 
called a Tabtii, which is a wheel with hollow fellies that lifts the water 
to the desired height. It is a very light machine and easily worked, but 
only used in certain places. There is another kind of a wheel in use 
in the Fayum. It is so arranged that the wheel is turned by the 
weight or force of the water itself 

All through Egypt old-time methods are passing away, more espec- 
ially where the banks of the river are high, and larger quantities of water 
are desired. In such places steam pumps are used, which are run night 
and day at certain seasons of the year. In this way very large quantities 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 169 

of water are obtained, for wliicti there will be ample need, if the crop be 
sugar cane, as it requires far more water than any other crop grown in 
the land of Egypt. The water when raised is distributed over the land 
by little ditches, or furrows, just as the ranchers do in the southern part 
of California. 

The waters of the Nile contain a very rich compost of Nile mud 
which enables the farmers to raise successive crops of corn, beans, etc., 
without manuring the soil. But in the case of sugar cane and cotton a 
fertilizing agent is needed after every planting, on account of the exhaust- 
ive nature of these crops upon the soil, when the fellaheen spreads over 
the impoverished soil a dressing of pigeon's dung. This fertilizer is far 
more easily obtained than any other, because these people keep countless 
numbers of these birds for this express purpose. If the ruins of a city or 
temple should be in the vicinity they haul the nitrous soil to their fields 
and use it as a fertilizing agent, which also has been found of great bene- 
fit. The inundations not only prepare the fields for the crops but deposits 
at the same time, a rich fertilizer that causes them to grow in greater 
abundance than without it. The rising of the river also fills the streams 
and water courses with an abundance of fish of all kinds, which are very 
often caught by the fellaheen while engaged in directing the water over 
the land. When the children of Israel fled out of the land of bondage 
and were wandering in the desert, they not only sighed for the flesh-pots 
of Egypt, but for the fish as well. 

Kenrick informs us in his " Ancient Egypt," page 71, ei seq., 
that " the mean quantity of water brought down by the Nile, in nor- 
mal years, as it depends on cosmical causes, probably continues the 
same from age to age, and the extent of land which it is capable of 
fertilizing by its overflow tends to increase, till its diffusion is stopped 
by the Arabian and Libyan hills. Long before the inundation reaches 
its maximum the dikes which close the communication between the 
canals and the Nile are opened and the water diffuses itself, first of 
all, over the lands which lie toward the Desert ; gradually as it rises 
it irrigates the nearer country, but the immediate banks of the river 
are seldom covered, and serve as a highway for the people while the 
inundation continues. In the Delta, where the slope is small, the 
whole country is laid under water during an extraordinary rise, and 



ITO EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

boats take the place of the ordinary modes of communication. Euro- 
pean travellers commonly choose the winter and spring for a journey 
through Egypt, and therefore do not see the Nile at its height ; but 
those who have resided there through all seasons assure us that the 
description of Herodotus is still realized, the villages on their elevated 
sites rising out of a lake, like the Cyclades from the ^gean Sea. 

" The trees which grew in Egypt were not numerous ; two species of 
palm, beside their fruit, furnished material from different parts of the tree 
for ever}' kind of work for which solid timber or tough fibre can be 
employed. The sycamore and various species of acacia also abounded, 
but no other trees of a large size were indigenous to the country. The 
products of the fields of Egypt were almost all the results of cultivation. 
Grain, herbs, and leguminous vegetables were produced in an abundance 
which no other country could rival ; but its native botany was scanty, the 
yearly renewal of the soil preventing the seeds which had fallen on the 
surface from vegetating, and culture exterminating all plants which can- 
not be made serviceable to man. The fragrance of flowers was wanting 
in its landscape, for those of Egypt have verj' little odor. The sandy 
desert which lies bej-ond the reach of the inundation has a scanty vegeta- 
tion of its own — stunted shrubs and herbs, which have generally an aro- 
matic smell." 

The construction of the dams, referred to elsewhere, will regulate 
the flow of v.ater. The banks of the river and various canals will, 
under these new conditions, always be the highwa3'S for the people 
who live either in Upper or Lower Egypt, and instead of flooding the 
Delta and destroying villages, etc., it will be a thing of the past. 



Ei)t Supreme ^rcftitect of tje Bniberse. 



171 



Blessed is the man who bath obtained 

Che riches of the wisdom of 6od; 

dretched is he who hath 

H false opinion about things divine. 

God may not be approached. 

Nor can wc reach r>im with our eyes. 

Or touch Rim with our hands. 

No human bead is placed upon Ris limbs, 

Nor branching arms ; 

Re has no feet to carry Rim apace, 

Nor other parts of men; 

But Re is all pure mind, holy and infinite. 

Darting with swift thought through the universe, 

fn'om end to end. 

— Empedocles. 



172 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 1T3 



CHAPTER VIII. 

THE SUPREME ARCHITECT OF THE UNIVERSE. 



Wz: 



a man becomes a Mason and takes upon himself the solemn 
that binds lis all in bonds of fraternal love, it does not in 
any wa}' interfere with his belief in God, or his religion, no matter what 
his belief may be. He need not cease to be a Christian, Mohammedan, 
Buddhist, Hindu, Jew, or an}' other denomination. If he earnestly 
studies the esoteric teachings of ancient Masonry, as taught in the 
Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite, he will gain a far deeper insight into 
his own faith, and a far clearer conception, of his own creed, which will 
enable him to understand its sublime teachings and spiritual Truths. He 
will recognize that all religions must have emanated from a common 
source, originated from the same grand fountain, the "Ana'en/ Wisdom 
Religion " whose eternal verities are to be found in all other teachings, in 
all other Religions, and may be summarized as follows: — ist. A belief in 
" One eternal, infinite, incognizable, real Existence, and. From that the 
manifesting God, unfolding from unity to dualty, from dualty to trinity. 
3rd. From the manifested Trinity man}- spiritual Intelligences guiding 
the Kosmic order. 4th. Man a reflection of the manifested God and 
therefore a trinity fundamental!}', his inner and real self being eternal, 
one with the Self of the universe. 5th. His evolution by repeated incar- 
nations; into which he is drawn b}- desire, and from which he is set free 
by knowledge and sacrifice, becoming divine in potency as he had ever 
been in latency." 

I have read man 3- works on religion, science and philosophy, and 
among them all, outside of the " Secret Doctrine," I have found none 
which gave me so much genuine pleasure, and from which I derived so 
much profit, as I did in perusing that most valuable and extraordinary 
work " Morals and Dogmas," from the pen of that most scholarly gentle- 
man and Brother Mason, General Albert Pike. I most earnestly urge 



174 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

every Mason to possess a copy of this magnificent work, because it will 
help him to come to an understanding of the profound Symbology of the 
Masonic Fraternity, and thoroughly comprehend the sublime philosophi- 
cal Truths of the esoteric teachings of our own beloved Ancient and 
Accepted Scottish Rite. Therefore, in order that you, my dear Brothers 
and readers, may have some idea of the writings of this most worthy 
exponent, I quote you from the preface, page 4 : — 

" The teachings of these Readings are not sacramental so far as they 
go beyond the realm of Morality into those of other domains of Thought 
and Truth. The Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite uses the word 
' Dogma ' in its true sense, of doctrine or teaching ; and is not dogmatic 
in the odious sense of that term. Every one is entirely free to reject 
and dissent from whatsoever herein may seem to him to be untrue or 
unsound. It is only required of him that he shall weigh what is 
taught and give it fair hearing and unpredjudiced judgment. Of course, 
the ancient theosophic and philosophic speculations are not embodied 
as a part of the doctrines of the Rites ; but because it is of interest and 
profit to know what the Ancient Intellect thought upon these subjects, 
and because nothing so conclusively proves the radical difference be- 
tween our human and the animal nature, as the capacity of the human 
mind to entertain such speculations in regard to itself and the Deity." 

I shall once more quote you from " Morals and Dogmas," page 5^4, 
et seq.: " To every Mason there is a God One Supreme, Infinite in Good- 
ness, Wisdom, Foresight, Justice and Benevolence ; Creator, Disposer, 
and Preserver of all things. How or by what intermediate He creates, 
and acts, and in what way He unfolds, and manifests Himself, Masonry 
leaves to creeds, and Religious to inquire. 

"To every Mason the soul of man is immortal. Whether it emanates 
from and will return to God and what its continued mode of existence 
hereafter, each judges for himself. Masonr}^ was not made to settle 
that. 

" To every Mason, Wisdom, or Intelligence, Force, or Strength 
and Harmony, or Fitness, and Beauty are the Trinity of the attrib- 
utes of God. With the subtleties of Philosophy concerning them. 
Masonry does not meddle, nor decide as to the reality of the supposed 
Existences which are their personifications : nor whether the Christian 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 175 

Trinity be such a personification or a Reality of the gravest import 
and significance. 

" To every Mason the Infinite Justice and Benevolence of God give 
ample assurance that Evil will ultimately be dethroned, and the Good, the 
True and the Beautiful reign triumphant and eternal. It teaches as it 
feels and knows, that Evil, and Pain, and Sorrow exists as a part of a wise 
and beneficient plan, all the parts of which work together under God's 
eye to a result which shall be perfection. Whether the existence of evil 
is rightly explained in this creed or that b}^ Tj-phon, the Great Serpent, 
by Ahriman and his armies of Wicked Spirits, b}' the Giants and Titans 
that war against Heaven, by the two co-existing Principles of Good and 
Evil, by Satan's temptation and the fall of Man, by Lok and the serpent 
Fenris, it is beyond the domain of Masonry to decide, nor does it need to 
inquire. Nor is it within the province to determine how the ultimate 
triumph of Light and Truth and Good, over Darkness and Error and 
Evil is to be achieved ; nor whether the Redeemer looked and longed for 
by all nations, hath appeared in Judea or is yet to come. 

" It reverences all the great reformers. It sees in Moses, the Law- 
giver of the Jews, in Confucius, and Zoroaster, in Jesus of Nazareth, and 
in the Arabian Iconoclast, Great Teachers of Morality and Eminent 
Reformers, if no more ; and allows every brother of the Fraternity to 
assign to each, such higher and even Divine character, as his creed and 
truth require. 

" Thus Masonry disbelieves no truth and teaches unbelief in no 
creed, except so far as such creed may lower its lofty estimate of the 
Deit}^ and degrade Him to the level of the passions of humanity, deny 
the high destiny of man, impugn the goodness and benevolence of the 
Supreme God, strike at the great columns of Masonry, Faith, Hope and 
Charity, or inculcate immorality and disregard of the active duties of 
the Fraternity. 

" Masonry is a workshop ; but one in which all civilized men can 
unite ; for it does not undertake to explain, or dogmatically to settle 
those great mysteries, that are above the feeble comprehension of 
our human intellect. It trusts in God, and HoPES ; it BELIEVES, 
like a child, and is humble. It draws no sword to compel others to 
adopt its belief, or to be happy with its hopes. And it Waits with 



170 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

patience to uuderstand the mysteries of uature and nature's God here- 
after. 

" The greatest mysteries in the universe are those which are ever 
goiug on around ns ; so trite and common to us that we never note them 
or reflect upon them. Wise men tell ns of the laius that regulate the 
motions of the spheres, which flashing in hxige circles and spinning on 
their axis, are also ever darting with inconceivable rapidity through the 
infinities of space ; while we atoms sit here and dream that all was made 
for us. The}' tell us learnedl}' of centripetal and centrifugal y^-'^rr^, grav- 
ity and attraction, and all the other sounding terms invented to hide 
a waiif of meaning". There are other forces in the universe than those 
that are mechanical. 

"The mysteries of the Great Universe of God! How can we with 
our limited mental vision expect to grasp and comprehend them ! 
Infinite Space stretching out from us every wa}', without limit ; infinite 
TiMK, without beginning or end ; and zee Here and Now, in the centre 
of each ! An infinity of siins, the nearest of which onl}^ diminish in size, 
viewed with the most powerful telescope ; each with its retinue of worlds, 
infinite nmnbers of such suns, so remote from us tliat their light would 
not reach us journeying during an infinitA' of time, while the light that 
lias reached us from some that we seem to see, has been upon its journey 
for fifty centuries ; our world spinning upon its axis, and rushing ever 
in its circuit around the sun, and all our systems revolving round some 
great central point ; and that, and suns, and stars, and worlds evermore 
flashing onward with incredible rapidity through illimitable space ; and 
then in every drop of water that we drink, in everj^ morsel of much of 
our food, in the air in the earth, in the sea, incredible nmltitudes of 
living creatures, invisible to the naked eye, of a minuteness beyond 
belief, yet organized, living, feeding, perhaps with consciousness of iden- 
tity, and memory and instinct. 

" God, therefore, is a m)''ster3% only as everj'thing that surrounds us, 
and as we ourselves, are a mystery. We know that there is and must 
be a First Cause. His attributes, severed from Himself, are unrealities. 
As color and extension, weight and hardness do not exist apart from 
matter as separate existences and substantives, spiritual or immaterial ; 
so the Goodness, Wisdom, Justice, Mercy and Benevolence of God are 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 177 

not independent existences, personifj' them as men may, but attributes of 
the Deity, the adjectives of One Great Snbstantive. But we know that 
He must be Good, True, Wise, Just, Benevolent, Merciful ; and in all 
these, and all His other attributes, Perfect and Infinite, because we are 
conscious that these are laws imposed on us b}^ the very nature of 
things, necessary and without which the universe would be confusion, 
and the existence of a God incredible. They are His essence, and 
necessary, as His existence. 

" He is the Living, Thinking-, Intelligent Soul of the Universe, the 
Peri^ianent, the Stationary, of Simon Magus, the One that ahvays is 
of Plato, as contradistinguished from the perpetual flux and reflux, or 
Genesis of t/iii/<^s. And as the thoughts of the soul, emanating from 
the soul, become audible and visible in Words, so did The Thought 
OF God, springing up within himself, immortal as Himself, when once 
conceived, — immortal he/ore, because i>i Himself utter itself in THE 
Word, its manifestations and mode of communication, and thus create 
the material, mental, spiritual universe, which, like Him, never began 
to exist.'' 

This is the real idea of the ancient nations: God, the Almighty, 
Father and Source of all ; His Thought conceiving the whole universe, 
and ivilling its creation : His Word uttering that Thought and thus 
becoming the Creator or Demionrgos in whom was Life and Light, and 
that Light the life of tlie universe. Nor did that Word cease at the 
single act of Creation ; and having set going the great machine and 
enacted the laws of its motion and progression, of Inrth and life, and 
change and death, cease to exist, or remain thereafter in inert idleness. 

For the Thought of God lives and is Immortal. Embodied 
in tlie JFord, is not only created, but it preset ves. It conducts and 
controls the Universe, all spheres, all worlds, all actions of mankind 
and ever_v animate and inanimate creature. It speaks in the soul 
of evei"y man that lives. The stars, the earth, the trees, the winds, 
the universal voice of nature, tempest and avalanche ; the sea's roar 
aud the grave voice of the waterfall, the hoarse thunder and the low 
whisper of the brook, the song of birds, the voice of love, the speech of 
men, all are the alphaliet in which it communicates itself to men, and 
informs them of the will and law of God, the Soul of the Universe. 
12 



1T8 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Any man gazing up into the cosmic space, of a glorious sum- 
mer's night, will see m3'riads of starry worlds rotating upon their 
axis, shining with a glor}'' incomprehensibl}^ grand, each and every one 
moving in rythmic harmony along its allotted path, according to the 
law governing these glorious stellar worlds. He will not only be 
impressed by the grandeur of their movements, but he will recog- 
nize that this planet of ours, sinks into comparative insignificance, 
when compared to those glorious orbs refulgent in the starry va,ult 
above, and he will begin to realize that they are not moving by 
chance, that their motions are not at random, but that each and 
all are a part of the Divine whole, and that they all perform their 
various motions in space according to Divine Ideation, or that Divine 
Principle that demonstrates to man that there is a something — an 
incomprehensible Cause, which directs and controls the motions of 
these planets through the spatial depths around him. Then will he 
dimly sense the Divine in their motions, and, like me, bow with 
awe and reverence before this Divine and incomprehensible Principle, 
a knowledge of which passeth all understanding. 

Every human being, no matter how low in the ethnological 
scale of humanity we find him, no matter how degraded and brutal 
he is, no matter how deluded by superstition and ignorance he may 
be, in the silence of the night, surrounded by the grandeur and 
harmony of nature, and impressed by the sublimity of the under- 
lying ideation that permeates it, is most assuredl}^ capable' of form- 
ing for himself, some abstract conception of a Deity, whereby to 
account for the sublime grandeur and glory of nature in all her 
differentiations and wonderful manifestations, which an anthropomor- 
phic God could not logically explain. 

He will see around him a world that is vibrating with life and 
harmony. He will see in every fronded fern and flower an expres- 
sion of the Divinity. He will see a world cycling along in har- 
niou}^, performing its various motions in space with an exactitude 
seemingly incomprehensible. He will hear in the mountain stream, 
as it flows along o'er its rocky bed, the voice of his Maker, and 
he would hear it in the rustling corn, the swaying pines, the song 
of birds or the hum of bees, and in the whisperings of insect life, 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 179 

as they revel in a glory of life and sunshine, in the rippling waves 
as they beat upon the shore, or the gliding river that goes mur- 
muring by to its home in the sea. And from out the mire of doubt 
and hesitation he never loses completely the consciousness of Divine 
possibilities, and he will dimly sense the hallowed touch of his 
heavenly Father in these sublime and glorious manifestations. 

This potential sensing of the Divine is most assuredl}' the true 
difiference between man and the superior animals. It is this distinc- 
tive power in man which lifts him far above the level of his retarded 
brethren in evolution, the animal, and justifies his claim to having 
latent within him the potentiality oj beconmtg the highest being in 
natnre''s evolutionary processes. 

The faculty of reasoning and using an articulate language, places 
man at the head of the animal kingdom which he dominates, through 
the potential forces he has developed during the many lives that he 
has lived, and b}^ the various experiences he has gained, makes all 
below him subservient to his indomitable will and energ}^ If we 
consider the animal kingdom as a whole, and mankind separated from 
it, and forming a class of its own, we shall find that articulated lan- 
guage is the result of the Manasic element within us, and of long 
ages of accumulated training, and that it is an essential attribute of 
man, while the phonetic expression of the animal, compared to the articu- 
late of the human, is only of secondary consideration. We find that 
some animals seem to reason far better than some men, and the true 
difference between the two is not so very great, after all. The animal 
is just a little way below us on the path of evolution, dowered with 
instinctual cognition, while man has a self-conscious knowledge of tbe 
potential forces within him. Man has been illuminated with mind, 
and by its divine touch he has been transformed -into the True 
Man, The Thinker. But we must thoroughly understand that this 
transformation conies from above. Man's spiritual soul conies Jroni the 
Divinity itself^ and not from below, evolving through the brute. It 
is a ray of the Divine Spirit that makes him and his Father one. 
This God in man is the guide and director that helps him to gain 
experience and knowledge during the many lives that lie before him, on 
the path his feet must tread. It is that glorious Light which illuminates 



18(1 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

his path and leads him on to far higher planes of spiritual unfoldnient, 
until he will eveutuall}^ stand upon the threshold of complete perfection, 
when he will full}^ realize that he and his Father are one. 

We have much to learn from the insect world, and more especially 
the Ant. Of all the insects that we know, none seem to me to possess 
so much intelligence as does the ant. Again look at the Bees, with their 
extraordinary mechanical skill and ingenuity, their wonderful industry 
and forethought, with the methods they adopt in building their comb, the 
shape and arrangement of their cells, their knowledge of what will give 
the most strength and greatest storage capacit}' for the amount of space 
and material used. These things command our most profound attention 
for they are all deeply interesting and well worthy of earnest study 
and thought. Look at the Elephant, the Horse and the Dog, and their 
remarkable power of finding methods by which to accomplish their 
desires. These animals are quite equal to the average man, in the prac- 
tical application of selfish reasoning, and for the purpose of supplying 
themselves with the needs of ever}' da}' life. Yet, notwithstanding all 
these remarkable instinctual developments, no animal has ever shown the 
slightest ca.pacity for abstract reasoning or conceptions independent of its 
temporary wants or desires, and not the slightest tendency to worship 
the Divine principle that is manifested in the wondrous beauties of 
Nature surrounding him. 

J. D. Buck, 32°, in his "Mystic Masonry," page 125, et seq., says: 
" How much one's idea of God colors all his thoughts and deeds is 
seldom realized. The ordinary crude and ignorant conception of a 
personal God more often results in slavish fear on the one hand and 
Atheism on the other. It is what Carlyle calls ' an absentee God, doing 
nothing since the six days of creation, but sitting on the outside and 
seeing it go ! ' This idea of God carries with it, of course, the idea of 
creation, as something already completed in time; when the fact is, crea- 
tion is a process, without beginning or end. The world — all worlds — are 
being ' created ' to-day as much as at any period in the past. Even the 
apparent destruction of worlds is a creative, or evolutionary process. 
Emanating from the bosom of the all, and running their cyclic course ; 
day alternating with night, on the outer physical plane, they are again 
iudraivu to the invisible plane, only to re-emerge after a longer night and 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. IBI 

start again on a higher cycle of evolution. Theologians have tried in 
vain to attach the idea of inunanence to that of personality, and ended 
in a jargon of words, and utter confusion of ideas. A personal Absolute 
is not, except in potency. God does not think, but is the cause of 
Thought. God does not love, he is Love, in the perfect or absolute 
sense ; and so with all the Divine attributes. God is thus the concealed 
Logos the ' Causeless Cause,' the ' Rootless Root,' God never manifests- 
Himself, to be seen of men. Creation is His manifestation, and as crea- 
tion is not complete, and never will be, and as it never had a beginning, 
there is a concealed or unrevealed potency back of and beyond all 
creation, which is still God. Now, Space is the most perfect symbol of 
this idea of Divinit}'; for it enters into all our concepts, and is the basis 
of all our experiences. We cannot fathom it, or define it, or exclude 
it from a single thought or experience. Space is boundless, infinite, 
unfathomable, unknowable ; in all, over all, through all. We know that 
It Is, and that is all that we know about it. 

" But are not these just the attributes that are assigned to the 
Absolute and Infinite Deity ? And they are all negations. God, sa3's 
the Kabalah, is No Thing. But the theologian will hasten to say that 
this is pure Pantheism. It is no more Pantheism than it is Atheism, 
for, as already shown, the Ain Soph is before and beyond Creation, or 
Cosmos. It is not God deduced or derived from Nature, but precisely 
the reverse ; nature derived from God, and yet God remains ' the same, 
yesterday, to-day and forever ' — the CHANGELESS. The stabilit}' of 
nature is derived from the unchangeableness of God. God never tires, 
is not exhausted at His work, needing rest. That were so human as to 
be childish, and the idea perhaps, originated from the cyclic law found in 
the Kabalah of the ' Days and Nights of Brahm,' the ' Manvantaras and 
Pralayas,' or periods of ' outbreathing,' and of ' inbreathing ' in the cj^cles 
of evolution." 

God, according to Pythagoras, was One, a single substance, whose 
continuous parts extend through all the Universe without separation, 
difference or inequalit}^, like the soul in the human body. He denied 
the doctrine of the Spiritualists, who had severed the Divinity from the 
Universe, making Him exist apart from the Universe, which thus became 
no more than a material work, on which acted the Abstract Cause, a God 



182 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

isolated from it. The Ancient Theology did not so separate God from 
the Universe. This Eusebius attests, in saying that but a small number 
of wise men, like Moses, had sought for God or the cause of all, outside 
of that ALL ; while the philosophers of Egypt and Phoenicia, real authors 
of all the old Cosmogonies had placed the supreme Cause m the Universe 
itself, and in its parts, so that, in their view, the world and all its parts 
are iii God. 

Ever}' man conceives of a Deity according to the dictates of his own 
conscience and expresses it in accordance with that conception. For 
instance, the Red man that roams, in a semi-civilized condition, the 
mountains and plains of this continent, defies the forces of Nature he 
does not understand, and yet in the depth of his heart, makes his devo- 
tions to the Great Spirit that is just as incomprehensible. 

Go to the Chinaman, and he will teach you the Law of Love that was 
taught by Lao-tze long centuries before Christ was born, and yet the 
same Truths are to be found in 3'our own creed. Go to the denizen of 
Central Africa and 3'ou will find him enwrapped in a knowledge of this 
Divine Principle to which I have referred above. 

The following beautiful and expressive poem gives such a full 
and comprehensive idea of the Supreme Ruler of the Universe that I 
am constrained to publish it in its entirety for the benefit of those 
who may not have had the opportunit}^ of seeing it before: 

GOD. 

O, Thou Eternal One ! whose presence bright 

All space doth occup}', all motion guide ; 
Unchanged through Time's all devastating flight ; 

Thou, only God ! There is no God beside ! 
Being above all beings ! Mighty One ! 

Whom none can comprehend and none explore, 
Who fil'st existence with Thyself alone — 

Embracing all — supporting — ruling o'er — * 

Being whom we call God — now and evermore. 

In its sublime research, philosophy 

May measure out the ocean deep — ma)' count 

The sands or the sun's rays — but God ! for thee 

There is no weight nor measure— none can mount 




C^~v; 



JT^. 



:^Ta^' " '1': 





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ii^i:^!^ 



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ij i*^ r ^7]r-^f 



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111 







A MINARET. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. im 

Up to Tliy mysteries : Reason's l)riRhtest spark, 

Though kindlefl by Thy light, in vain may try 

To trace thy counsels, infinite and dark ; 

And tliought is lost e'er thought can soar so high, 
Kven like past moments in eternity. 

Thou from primeval nothingness didst call. 

First, chaos — then existence — I^ord, on thee ■ 
Eternity had its foundation — all 

Sprang forth from Tliee — liglit, joy, liarmony, 
Sole origin — all life, all l)eauty. Thine. 

Thy word created all, and doth create ; 
Thy splendor fills all space with rays divine. 

Tliou art and wert and shall he ! Glorious ! Great ! 

lyife-giving, life-sustaining Potentate ! 

Thy chains the umneasured universe surround — 

Upheld by Thee, by Thee inspired with breath! 
Tiioii llic beginning with the end has liound, 

And l)eantifnlly mingled life and death ! 
As sparks mount upwards from tlie fiery blaze, 

vSo suns are born, so worlds sprang fortli from Thee ; 
And as the spangles in the sunny rays 

vSliiiie round the silver snow, the pageantry 
Of Heaven's bright army glitters in Thy jiraise. 

» 

A million torches lighted by Thy hand 

Wander unwearied through the l)lue abyss; 
They own Tiiy power, accomplish Thy command; 

All gay with life, all eloqnenl with Ijliss. 
What shall we call them? J'iks of crystal light? 

A glorious company of golden streams? 
Lamps of celestial ether l)urning bright ? 

Sun's lighting systems with Iheir joyous beams? 
But Thou Ir) these are as the moon to night ! 

Yet as a drop of water in the sea, 

All this magnificence in Thee is lost ; 
What are ten llioiisand worlds compared to Thee, 

And what am I, then? Heaven's unnumbered host. 



184 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Though multiplied by myriads, and arrayed 
In all the glory of sublimest thought 

Is but an atom in the balance weighed 

Against Thy greatness, is a cypher brought 
Against infinity. What am I, then? Nought! 

Nought ! But the effluence of Thy light divine. 

Pervading worlds hath reached my bosom, too; 
Yes, in my spirit dost Thy .spirit shine, 

As shines the sunbeam in a drop of dew. 
Nought! But I live, and on Hope's pinion's fly 

Eager towards Thy presence ; for in Thee 
I live and breathe and dwell ; aspiring high, 

Even to the throne of Thy divinity. 

I am, O God ! and surely Thou must be ! 

Thou art ! Directing, guiding all, thou art, 

Direct my understanding, then, to thee ; 
Control my spirit, guide my wandering heart ; 

Though but an atom 'midst immensity, 
Still I am something, fashioned by Thy hand ! 

I hold a middle rank 'twixt heaven and earth, 
On the last verge of mortal being stand 

Close to the realms where angels have their birth. 
Just on the boundary of the spirit land. 

The chain of being is complete in me ; 

In me is matter's last gradation lost, 
And the next step is spirit — Deity ! 

I can command Thy lightning, and am dust ! 
A monarch and a slave - a worm — a God ! 

Whence came I here? And how so marvelously 
Constructed and conceived? Unknown ! This clod 

Eives surely through some higher energy, 
For from itself alone it could not be. 

Creator ! Yes, Thy wisdom and l*hy word 

Created me ! Thou source of life and good ! 

Thou spirit of my spirit, and my Lord ! 

Thy Hght, Thy love, in their bright plentitude 



EGYPT. THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 185 

Filled me with an immortal soul, to spring 

Over the abyss of death, and bade it wear 

The garments of eternal day, and wing 

Its heavenly flight beyond this Httle sphere. 

Even to its source — to Thee — its author there. 

O thouglit ineffable ! O vision blest ! 

Though worthless our conceptions all of Thee, 
Yet, shall Thj' shadowed image fill our breast, 

And with it homage to the Deity, 
God ! Thus above nij' lowly thoughts can soar ; 

Thus seek Thy presence. Being wise and good 
Midst Thy vast works, admire, obey, adore ; 

And when the tongue is eloquent no more. 

The soul shall speak in tears of gratitude. 

— Derzhaven. 

Civilized men of all nations formulate special gods to suit their own 
particular spiritual needs and endow them with the peculiar attributes, 
which are simply personifications of the general characteristics of the wor- 
shippers themselves. They make gods in their own image, and worship 
them with an extraordinary devotion. But as soon as the Mind rises 
above these social traits and personal characteristics ; as soon as he or 
they become capable of seeing something more grand, more sublime, 
more ennobling, more spiritualizing beneath the frivolities of these per- 
sonal gods, then will they be enabled to form some pure abstract 
conception, devoid of concrete symbolism, that senses the necessary 
existence of an underlying Divine Principle, manifesting Itself in, 
through, and by Nature. In its widest sense, feeling the mighty Presence 
of the Infinite. Then will the mind of Man bow down in reverence, 
making no rash attempt to comprehend the Absolute, 3'et fully conscious 
of the. fact that being but an infinitisimal part of the Supreme All it is 
simply impossible for the finite to understand the Infinite. The voice of 
the Divine is one and the same, whether coming from Indian, Chinese, 
African or civilized white man. The New teachings are like the Old, if 
we only understand them, for the underlying Truths of all Religions, all 
philosophies, and all sciences are identically the same. No common 
sense reasoning Man, who is capable of thinking for himself, will ever 
deny this fact. 



186 EGYPT. THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

The so-called Atheists and Agnostics are in open revolt only against 
the attributes, more or less fanciful and erroneous, with which sects and 
creeds describe their respective and exclusive gods. Not so much against 
the conception of a Divine Principle, /^r se^ but only as to the absurd way 
in which the various gods are represented. 

Voltaire derided and scoffed at the churches, creeds, dogmas and 
priest-craft, and those who believed in them, as well as what he called 
their mummeries and sophistry, ridiculing the Bishops and the Clergy. 
Yet, notwithstanding, he wrote — " If God did not exist it would be 
necessary to invent one." , 

Robert Ingersoll, the foremost and most aggressive agnostic in the 
closing years of the nineteenth century, brought forth the power of his 
wit and eloquence against abuses and errors born of ignorance and 
fanaticism. He assailed all religious forms of faith and practice with the 
keen, unphilosophical weapons of satire, obloquy and witticism, yet any 
thoughtful reader of his best efforts can feel vibrating between the lines 
a deep, true reverence for the unknowable, unconceivable, self-evident 
Divine Principle. 

No matter where we force our investigations, even if we carry them 
into the very strongholds of the most terrible exponents of religious 
faith and practice, enemies of all creeds and dogmas ; I refer to the 
materialistic scientists, or rather naturalists, or Darwinians, at whose head 
stood the author of the " History of Natural Creation,'' Professor 
Heackell, late of the University of Jena, whose history is diametrically 
opposed to the cosmogony of the Pentateuch, or the orthodox, super- 
natural or miraculous creation; yet, we shall find expressed in clear 
technical scientific terms, in that work, a positive recognition of the Di- 
vine Principle as the Eternal source of all that is, or ever will be. He 
refutes entirely the dualistic theory of Agassiz, because it supposes 
two distinct factors : — an extra cosmic God and Nature as a separate 
thing, and he closes his remarks by this unmistakable declara^tion : " But 
they overlook the fact that this personal creation is only an idealized or- 
ganism endowed with human attributes. The more developed men of 
the present day are capable of conceiving that infinitely nobler and sub- 
limer idea of God which alone is compatible with the monistic 
conception of the universe, and which recognizes God's Spirit and power 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 187 

in all phenomena, without exception. It is of this noble idea of God that 
Goethe says ' certainly there does not exist a more beautiful worship of 
God than that which needs no image, but which arises in our hearts 
from converse with Nature.' By it alone we arrive at the sublime 'Pan- 
theistic ' idea of the unity of God and Nature. Be it understood that 
Pantheistic here does not mean, as usually translated, many gods, but All 
God ; from pan (all) and tkeos (God) . It is synonomous with Monism 
and Deism." Can Heackell be charged with Atheism ? 

If we carefully examine the writings of the most eminent men of 
every age in the world's history, especially those who are and were sin- 
cere and truthful ; no matter whether they be philosophers, scientists, 
materialists, spiritualists, freethinkers, poets or religious writers, we shall 
find that each one of them recognizes a Deity according to his own 
conception, differing in form and attributes from the individual concep- 
tions b}^ others. For instance, in examining " The Zend-Avesta^'''' the 
sacred book of the Parsees or Sun worshippers of Persia and India ; the 
followers of Zoroaster, the ancient teacher of the Religion of Magi, 
we shall find they believed in two spirits, — Good and Evil — typified by 
Light and Darkness^ and that these two spirits, now and always have 
been engaged in antagonistic strife, making war one upon the other, 
until Light prevails, that is, until Man has conquered himself. We 
shall also find they believed that God has neither face nor form, color 
nor shape, nor fixed place and that there is no other like Him. He 
is Himself singly, such a glory that we cannot praise nor describe Him, 
nor can our mind comprehend Him. 

Rollin says : " As the Magi held images in utter abhorrence, they 
worshipped God only under the form o^ Fire, on account of its purity, 
brightness, activity, subtlety, fecundity and incorruptibility as the most 
perfect symbol of the Deity." 

" The Dabistan," compiled from the works of the ancient ^^Guebers^'' 
or " Fire Worshippers,' states that the Persians long before the mission 
of Zoroaster, venerated a prophet called Mahabad, whom they considered 
the Father of Mankind. He taught " eternity," or boundless time, has 
neither beginning nor end, and is the only thing that can neither be 
created nor destroyed, but is that which creates and destroys everything 
else. Therefore time is considered the great first Cause or Creator. 



188 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

The ancient Egyptians worshipped the Sun, as God, whom they 
considered to be the cause from which, and by which, all things were 
created. They believed that when the sun sank beneath the under- 
world and darkness covered the face of the earth he was engaged in 
fighting Appepi^ the great serpent, who was at the head of a very large 
army of personifications of darkness, mist and cloud, trying to over- 
throw him, but, as he appeared again in the morning, day after day, 
in all his resplendent glory, they hailed him with jo}^ and gladness as 
the victor, and worshipped him throughout the whole of Egypt. At 
Memphis he was worshipped as the creator god Ptah, the greatest of all 
gods. He was the ancient god of this • city whom the Greeks called 
Hephczstus. The black bull was the symbol of this god ; at Thebes 
Ammon-Ra or Amun-Ra " the veiled or unseen," the mystery of exist- 
ence. Osiris, the " Good," the beneficient principle pervading the 
universe, was one of those worshipped generally. Ra, or On, was origi- 
nally the sun-god, apparently a common object of worship to all 
prehistoric races. Heliopolis, or City of the Sun, being afterwards the 
Greek name of On, the town. Horus, the Light-bringer, weighed 
the heart of each man after his death ; and as the welfare of the 
departed spirit or " double " was connected with that of the deserted 
body, the latter ought to be carefull}^ preserved. Hence the great 
motive for embalming their dead and building massive tombs for the 
wealthy. 

The sun was worshipped all through Egypt, under various names, as 
the creator and preserver of all things, because its motions demonstrated 
to them life, death and re-incarnation. When it appeared in the East it 
was emblematic of life coming forth into light and definition ; in 
reaching its meridian height and glory, God the Creator giving forth to 
the world its fructifying, vivifying principles and demonstrating the 
fountain from which all things come. When it sank beneath the 
western horizon, leaving the earth enshrouded in darkness, it was emble- 
matic of death ; but when it again re-appeared in the early morning, 
lighting up the eastern sky with a perfect halo of light and glory, tinting 
the magnificent tombs and temples in rainbow hues, when the feathered 
songsters burst into voluminous praise and harmony, men prostrated 
themselves in adoration before the emblem of that incomprehensible 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 189 

principle which holds Kosmos and solar s\-stems within the hollow of his 
hand. This continual diurnal rising of the sun-god Ra was symbolical 
of the re-incarnation of the spirit of life ; therefore to them life was 
emblematic of death, and death symbolical of life. Death is but an 
aspect of life, for the destruction of one material form is simplj^ the 
prelude to the building up of others, a fact evidenced in all nature. 
" Death consists, indeed, in a repeated process of unrobing, or unsheath- 
ing. The immortal part of man shakes off from itself, one after the 
other, its outer casings, aud, as the snake from its skin, the butterfl}^ 
from its chrysalis, emerged from one after another, passing into a higher 
state of consciousness. 

" The cardinal doctrines of the Kabalah embrace the nature of the 
Deity, the divine emanations or Sephiroth, the cosmogou}'-, the creation 
of angels and man, their destiny, and the import of the revealed law. 
According to this esoteric doctrine, God who is boundless and above 
everything, even being and thinking, is called Ain-Soph. He is the 
space of the universe. In this boundlessness He could not be compre- 
hended b}' the intellect or described in words, and as such the Ain-Soph 
was in a certain sense — non-existent. To make this existence known 
and comprehended, the Ain-Soph had to become active and creative. As 
creation involves intention, desire, thought and work, and as these are 
properties which impl}- limit and belong to a finite being, and moreover 
as the imperfect and circumscribed nature of this creation precludes the 
idea of its being the direct work of the infinite and perfect, the Ain-Soph 
had to become creative through the medium of ten Sephiroth^ or intelli- 
gences which emanated from him like rays proceeding from a luminary. 
Now the wish to become manifest and known, and hence the idea of 
creation is co-eternal, with the inscrutable Deity. The first manifes- 
tation of this primordial will is called Sep/u'ra or emanation. This first 
Sephira, this spiritual substance which existed in the Ain-Soph from all 
eternitjr contained nine other intelligences or Sephiroth. These again 
emanated one from another, the second from the first, the third from the 
second, and so on up to ten. The ten Sephiroth, forming among them- 
selves, and with the Ain-Soph, a strict unity, and simply representing 
different aspects of one and the same being — ' The Creator and Preserver 
of all things.' " 



190 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Albert Pike, in "Morals and Dogmas," says on page 221, et scq : 
" Man's views in regard to God will contain only as much positive truth 
as the human mind is capable of receiving, whether that truth is attained 
by the exercise of reason, or communicated by revelation. It must 
necessarily be both limited and alloyed, to bring it within the com- 
petence of finite human intelligence. Being finite we can form no 
correct or adequate idea of the Infinite ; being material we can form 
no clear conception of the Spiritual. We do believe in and know the 
infinity of space and time and the spirituality of the soul ; but the idea 
of that infinity and spiritualit}^ eludes us. Even Omnipotence cannot 
infuse infinite conceptions into finite minds ; nor can God, without first 
entirely changing the conditions of our being, pour a complete and full 
knowledge of His own nature and attributes into the narrow capacity of 
the human soul. . . . 

" The consciousness of the individual reveals itself alone. His 
knowledge cannot pass beyond the limits of his own being. His con- 
ceptions of other things and other beings are only /lis conceptions. 
They are not those things or beings themselves. The living principle of 
a living universe must be Infinite ; while all our ideas and con- 
ceptions are finite and applicable only to finite beings. The Deity 
is thus not an object of knowledge., but oi faith ; not to be approached 
by the understanding ., but by the moral sense ; not to be conceived, 
but to be felt. All attempts to embrace the infinite in the conception 
of the finite are, and must be, only accommodations to the frailty 
of man. Shrouded from comprehension in an obscurity from which 
a chastened imagination is awed back, and thought retreats in con- 
scious weakness, the Divine Nature is a theme on which man is little 
entitled to dogmatize. Here the philosophic intellect becomes most pain- 
fully aware of its own insufficiency. 

"Every man's conception of God must vary with his mental culti- 
vation and mental powers. If any one contents himself with any lower 
image than his intellect is capable of grasping, then he contents himself 
with that which is false to him^ as well as false in Jact. If lower than 
lie can reach, he must needs feel it to be false 

" God and Truth are inseparable ; a knowledge of God is possession 
of the saving oracles of Truth. In proportion as the thought and pur- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 191 

pose of the individual are trained to conformity with the rule of right 
prescribed by Supreme Intelligence, so far is his happiness promoted, 
and the purpose of his existence fulfilled. In this way a new life arises 
in him ; he is no longer isolated, but part of the eternal harmonies 
around him. His erring will is directed by the influence of a higher 
will, informing and moulding it in the path of true happiness. 

" The grand objects of nature perpetually constrain men to think of 
their author. The Alps are the great altar of Europe ; the nocturnal 
sky has been to mankind the dome of a temple starred all over with 
admonitions to reverence, trust and love. The Scriptures for the human 
race are writ in earth and heaven. No organ or miserere touches the 
heart like the sonorous swell of the ocean wave's immeasureable laugh. 
Every year the old world puts on new bridal beauty, and celebrates its 
Whit Sunday, when in the sweet spring each bush and tree dons rever- 
ently its new glories. Autumn is a long All Saints' day ; and the 
harvest is Hallowmass to mankind. Before the human race marched 
down from the slopes of the Himalayas to take possession of Asia, 
Chaldea and Egypt, men marked each annual crisis, the solstices, and 
the equinoxes, and celebrated religious festivals therein ; and even then 
and ever since, the material was and has been the element of communion 
between man and God. 

" Nature is full of religious lessons to a thoughtful man. He dis- 
solves the matter of the universe, leaving only its forces ; he dissolves 
away the phenomena of human history, leaving only immortal spirit ; he 
studies the law, the mode of action of these forces, and this spirit ; which 
makes up the material and the human world, and cannot fail to be 
filled with reverence, with trust, with boundless love of the Infinite God, 
who devised these laws of matter and mind, and thereby bears up this 
marvellous universe of things and men. Science has its' New Testa- 
ment ; and the beatitudes of philosophj' are profoundly touching. An 
undevout astronomer is mad. Familiarity with the grass, and the trees 
teaches us deeper lessons of love and trust than we can glean from the 
writings of Fenelon and Augustine. The great Bible of God is ever 
open before mankind. The eternal flowers of heaven seem to shed sweet 
influence on the perishable blossoms of the earth. The great sermon 
of Jesus was preached on a mountain, which preached to him as he did 



192 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY 

to the people, and his figures of speech were first natural figures of 
fact. 

" Beautifully, above the great wide chaos of human errors, shines the 
calm, clear light of natural human religion, revealing to us God as the 
Infinite Parent of all, perfectly powerful, wise, just, loving, and perfectly 
holy too. Beautifully around, stretches off every way the Universe, the 
Great Bible of God. Material nature is its Old Testament, millions of 
years old, thick with eternal truths under our feet, glittering with ever- 
lasting glories over our heads, and human Nature is the New Testament 
from the Infinite God, ever}^ day revealing a new page as Time turns 
over the leaves. Immortality stands waiting to give a recompense for 
every virtue not rewarded, for every tear not wiped away, for every sorrow 
undeserved, for every prayer, for every pure intention, and emotion of the 
heart. And over the whole, over Nature, Material and Human, over this 
Mortal Life, and over the Bternal Past and Future, the infinite Loving- 
kindness of God the Father comes enfolding all, and blessing everything 
that ever was, that is, that ever shall be. 

" In the Divine Pymander, and 5th book, we find Hermes Trismeg- 
istus saying of God ' It is His essence to be pregnant, or great, in all 
things, and to make them. As without a maker it is impossible that any- 
thing should be made, so it is that he should not alwaj^s be, and always 
be making all things in heaven, in the air, in the earth, in the deep, in 
the whole world, and in every part of the whole that is or that is not. 
For there is nothing in the whole w'orld, that is not Himself, both the 
things that are, and the things that are not. This is God that is better 
than any name ; this is He that is secret ; this is He that is most mani- 
fest ; this is He that is to be seen by the mind ; this is He that is visible 
to the e3-e ; this is He that hath no body ; and this is He that hath many 
bodies ; rather there is nothing of any body which is not He. For He 
alone is all things. And for this cause He hath all names, because He 
is the One Father and therefore He hath no name because He is the 
Father of All.' " 

The ancient Greeks deified every force in Nature, weaving around 
each and all a poetical character which gives to them special character- 
istics and a personal history that is plainly traceable to two distinct 
causes. Every God in their mythology evidently sprang from their con- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 193 

ception of Kronos — Time and Uranus — space, both, emanating from 
chaos, and like the Persians and Chinese they believed tliat out from the 
darkness came forth. Light with all its objective harmonious differentia- 
tions and wonderful manifestations. Plato reviewed the various systems 
of philosophies that preceded him, rejecting what he deemed to be false 
and adopting what he thought to be true. He claimed that as the world 
was sensible it must have been produced from an effectual cause. Pytha- 
goras believed and taught that Number was tbe root basis of all forms, 
tbe world being regulated by numerical harmony. " Number lies at the 
root of the manifested Universe ; numbers and harmonious proportions 
guide the first differentiations of homogeneous substance, into heterogene- 
ous elements, and number and numbers set limits to the formative hand 
of Nature." 

We find in the '''' Sepher Jetsirah'''' (which is considered the ground- 
work for students in the Kabala and Jewish writings) that "The 
number Ten (lo) is a repetition of the One (i) being its multiple only; 
remove the one and there is no ten symbolizing God, the One, from 
whom all proceed. Thus the Ten brings all the digits back to Unity 
and ends the Pythagorean table. Such is the secret meaning of the 
' strong grip of the Lion's paw, of the tribe Judah,' between two hands 
— the Master-Mason's grip — the joint number of whose fingers is Ten. 
This number also gives rise to the grand origin of the Cross, as also to 
the Covenant, which stands as an iiudivided one (Exod. xxiv, 27, 28). 
The sum of the nine digits added together equals 45, and 4 + 5 = 9; the 
sum of the ten numbers is 55, and 5 + 5 = 10. Ten is also the root of 
Four, for if you add the first four numbers you have ten ; it is also 
the essential root of Seven, since the seven numbers added equal twenty- 
eight, and twenty-eight resolves itself into 10, thus 2 + 8 = 10." 

Anaxagorus recognized a supreme Intelligence as the principle of 
Life and arranged the primitive chaotic atoms into perfect molecular 
forms. 

Xenophanes maintained Unity — The Universe to be God. The 
Scandinavians have also their mythological ideas, adequate to their social 
characteristics, Avherein the basic conception of an Eternal Divine Prin- 
ciple in its triple aspect of Creator, Preserver, and Regenerator, can be 
perceived amidst complicated myths and hidden allegories, which appear 
13 



194 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

as absurd superstitions only when we Bave not the Key of the mysteries 
they conceal. 

Paracelsus says that, " The unmanifested Absolute cannot be con- 
ceived otherwise than as a mathematical point without any magnitude, 
and such a point in becoming manifest in all directions would necessarily 
become a sphere. If we imagine such a mathematical point as being 
self-conscious, thinking and capable to act, and desirous to manifest 
itself, the only thinkable mode in which it could possibly accomplish 
this would be to eradicate its own substance and consciousness from the 
centre towards the periphery. The centre is the Father^ the eternal 
source of all (John 1:4); the radius is the Son (the Logos)^ who was 
contained in the Father from eternity (John i : i), the substance of father 
and son from the incomprehensible centre to the unlimited periphery is 
the Holy Ghost, the spirit of truth manifested externally and revealed 
invisible Nature (John 15 : 26). We cannot conceive of a body without 
length, breadth and thickness ; a circle or a sphere always consists of a 
centre, radius and periphery. They are three, yet they are one, and 
neither of them can exist without the other two.* God sends out His 
thought by the power of His will. He holds fast to the thought and 
expresses it in the Word, which is contained in the creative and con- 
servative power, and his thought becomes corporified, bringing into 
existence worlds and beings, which form, so to say, the visible body of 
the invisible God. Thus were the worlds formed in the beginning by the 
thought of God acting in the Macrocosm (the Universal Mind), and in 
the same manner are forms created in the individual sphere of the mind 
of man. If we hold on to a thought we create a form in our inner world. 
A good thought produces a good, and an evil thought an evil form, each 
growing as they are nourished by thought or ' imagination.' " 

There was appended a note to the above, where the asterisk is 
placed : " The doctrine of the Trinity is found in all the principal 
religious systems. In the Christian Religion as Father, Son and Spirit ; 
among the Hindus as Brahma, Vishnu and Siva ; the Buddhists call it 
Muleprakriti, Prakriti and Purush ; the Persians teach that Ormuzd 
produced Light out of himself by the power of his word. The Egyp- 
tians called the first cause Ammon, out of which all things were created 
by the power of its own will. In China Kwan-shai-gin is the Universally 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 195 

manifested Word, coming from the unmanifested Absolute by tbe power 
of its own Will and being identical with the former. The Greeks called 
it Zeus (Power), Minerva (Wisdom), and Apollo (Beauty). The Germans, 
Wodan (the Supreme Cause), Thor (Power), and Feia (Beauty). Jehovah 
and Allah are trinities of Will, Knowledge and Power ; and even the 
Materialist believes in Causation, IMatter and Energy." 

Albert Pike, in " Morals and Dogmas," page 576 et sag, speaking 
of the various religions and their belief in God, says : " While all 
these faiths assert their claims to the exclusive possession of the Truth, 
Masonry inculcates its old doctrine and no more. That God is One. 
That His Thought, uttered in His Word, created the Universe and 
preserved it by those Eternal Laws which are the expression of that 
Thought. That the Soul of Man, breathed into him by God is as Immor- 
tal as His Thoughts are. That he is free to do evil, or to choose good, 
responsible for his acts and punishable for his sins. That all evil and 
wrong, and suffering are but temporary, the discords of one great 
Harmony ; to the great, harmonic final chord and cadence of Truth, 
Love, Peace, and Happiness, that will ring forever and ever under the 
Arches of Heaven, among all the Stars and Worlds, and in all souls of 
Man and Angels." 

In the Secret Doctrine, Stanza II, Section 6, page 6, it states that : 
" The Divine Thought does not imply the idea of a Divine Thinker. 
The Universe, not onl}^ past, present and future — a human, and finite 
idea expressed by finite thought — but in its totalit}', the Sat (an untrans- 
latable term), Absolute Being, with the Past and Future crystalized in an 
Eternal Present, is that Thought itself reflected in a secondary or mani- 
fested cause Brahman (neuter), as the Mysterious INIagnum of Paracelsus, 
is an absolute mystery to the human mind. Brahma, the male-female, 
the aspect and anthropomorphic reflection of Brahman^ is conceivable to 
the perceptions of blind faith, though neglected by human intellect, when 
it attains its majority. Hence the statement that during the prologue, 
so to say, of the drama of creation, or the beginning of cosmic evolution, 
the Universe, or the Son, lies still concealed ' in the Divine Thought ' 
which had not yet penetrated into the ' Divine Bosom.' This idea, note 
well, is at the root and forms the origin of all the allegories about the 
' Sons of God ' born of immaculate Virgins." 



196 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

This " Divine Thought," this Absolute, Eternal, Omnipresent 
Principal is the " Causeless Cause " of all the manifestations in the 
Kosmos, and it is beyond human speculation, exploration or similitude, 
being beyond the range and reach of human thought. 

Therefore, " This Infinite and Eternal Cause is the rootless root of 
all that was, is, or ever shall be. This cause is, of course, devoid of all 
attributes and is essentially without any relation to manifested being, as 
it is Be-ness — the essence of Being — rather than Being. All manifested 
is the vehicle of this Be-ness rather than what might be strictly called 
its manifestations. This Be-ness is symbolized in the ' Secret Doctrine ' 
under two aspects : First — Absolute, abstract space, the only thing the 
human mind can exclude from any conception, or conceive of by itself. 
Second — Absolute, abstract motion (under law and therefore intelligent), 
representing unconditional Consciousness. Consciousness being incon- 
ceivable without change, abstract motion thus symbolizes change which 
is its essential characteristic. Thus, then, the first fundamental axiom 
of the ' Secret Doctrine ' is this metaphysical One Absolute Be-ness. 
This it might be said is the Theosophical definition of God and will not 
differ greatly from that given by the Churches, if the idea of personality 
be eliminated. The God postulated in the Secret Doctrine requires 
infinite space, eternity of time universal, and therefore Infinite con- 
sciousness, and matter for a manifestation, which of course includes man, 
with all forms of Life on and off the earth, in addition to all the planets, 
■whether in this Solar system or any other throughout the infinity of 
Space." 

The Theosophical and Masonic Student is often told that this is 
Pantheism. If so it is a Spiritual Pantheism, and all who recognize the 
Infinity, Omnipresence, Eternity and Immutability of God are Pantheists. 

The Christian tells us that God is primarily, fundamentally and 
essentially — Thought. St. John informs us in the first chapter and first 
verse that : " In the beginning was the Word, and the Word >vas with 
God, and the Word was God." Now what is the meaning of such an 
assertion ? Does it explain to us what God is ? In order to come to a 
better understanding of this statement of St. John let us first see what 
relation Thought bears to the " Word." The brain is (in a very limited 
sense) the organ of the mind, and thought functions through it ; conse- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 197 

quently when the brain receives a thought, in order to give it expression 
it needs a word. Now we can understand what the Christian conception 
of God is from the following : " In the beginning was the Word " — word 
is the expression of a thonght. " The Word was with God " — then the 
expressed thought was with God. "And the Word was God " — therefore 
the Word or God was — Thought or Mind — Divine Ideation, from which 
the Thought and Word emanated This is exactly the abstract Masonic 
conception of the Supreme Architect of the Universe — God. 

The doctrine of the Trinity is to be found in all the principal 
religious systems as well as belief in the Absolute, the Unknowable, the 
Supreme Architect. Christianity offers in their Trinity : The Son^ the 
manifested Logos. " The Word " — the falling of spirit into matter, or 
the manifestation on the objective plane. The Holy Ghost^ the unmani- 
fested " Word," that which is with the Absolute, Divine Ideation, seen 
only by its effects. The Father — "The Word,'' the highest conception 
of the Divinity, The Absolute, The Unknowable. 

Therefore the God of the Free Mason is that which every man 
who is capable of thinking for himself is forced to admit, let him call // 
what he may. It makes no difference whether he calls it Almighty 
Matter, or Eternal Spirit, Brahm, Parabrahm, Abraham, Osiris, Ormuzd, 
Ain-Soph, Zeus, Allah, Jehovah, Adouai, Thor, God, or the Supreme 
Architect of the Universe. " What is there in a name ? " We search for 
Truth in all religions, all sciences, and all philosophies, claiming that 
" There is no religion higher than truth," and I do most certainly 
believe that the Divine Principle is essential Truth manifested in the 
harmony of the spheres, manifested in all the variant phases of life. 






199 



Slhtlc far as sight can reach, beneath as clear 
Hnd blue a heaven as ever blessed this sphere. 
Gardens, and minarets, and glittering domes, 
Hnd high-built temples, fit to be the homes 
Of mighty gods, and p)?ramid whose hour 
Outlasts all time, above the waters tower. 

— Moore. 



200 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 201 




CHAPTER IX. 

MOSQUES— TOMBS-MASSACRE OF MAMELUKES-HELIOPOLIS. 

N tlie east bank and a little over a mile from the Nile, stands 
Cairo, the capital of Egypt, latitude 30° 6' North and longitude 
31° 20' East of the meridian of Greenwich. This celebrated city 
includes four original sites. The first of which was founded by Amru 
after conquering Egypt. When the ancient fortress of Babylon sur- 
rendered in A. D. 641 to this celebrated general of the Caliph Omar he 
" pitched his tent " (Fostat) and the place where he camped was called 
" El Fostat," which eventually became the capital of Egypt. It 
remained such until, in the year A. D. 751, when Marwan II. was defeated 
by Abu-1'Abbas, who lost his life at Abusir in the Fayoum, then the 
Omayyade Dynasty ended in Egypt and the Abbaside Dynasty began 
under the reign of Abu-1' Abbas (a descendent of Abbas who defeated 
Marwan II). In A. D. 744 this ruler removed his residence a little farther 
to the northeast of the site that had been selected by Amru. It was 
again changed when Ahmed ibn-Tulun, Governor of Egypt, wrested the 
power from the ruling dynasty and founded a new line which bears his 
name. 

This Caliph removed the site of the growing capitol still farther to 
the northeast and founded a suburb known as " El-Katiya," where he 
built the celebrated mosque bearing his name. At the restoration of the 
Abbaside Governor and during the rule of the Ikshidide dynasty they 
held their court at the palace of Ahmed ibn-Tulun, where it remained 
until El Muizz sent an army under Gohar to invade Egypt which he 
captured. He founded the new city of El-Kahira, or " The Victorious," 
which has been corrupted into " Cairo." 

This city is the headquarters of nearly all the tourists that intend 
"doing Egypt." Here is the starting-place to many delightful jaunts, 
to various points of interest in the immediate vicinity of Cairo, as well as 



202 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

to those lying farther to the south aud beyond the cataracts, up to the 
confluence of the Blue and White Nile and the city of Khartoum. Cairo 
is the principal starting-point for the pilgrimage to Mecca and for the 
examination of the Pyramids. 

When I first visited the Capital of Eg^'pt the railroad from Alex- 
andria was not completed to the city of Cairo and the Suez Canal had not 
been started; but a very large force of Europeans were constructing a 
fine bridge across the river Nile, the first of a series of improvements 
destined to transform Egypt into a modern nineteenth century progres- 
sive country, with all the stir and bustle pertaining to many a 
European and American city. Civilization seemed to have touched 
Egypt with her magic wand and changed all things, connecting the two 
seas, building bridges, making railroads, introducing electric lights and 
power, giving them phonographs and all the wonderful inventions of the 
commencement of the twentieth century. Egypt was transformed from 
a semi-civilized barbarous condition into a new order and a new era. 

I again visited this country and Cairo, on my return from India, and 
the memory of it will remain with me while life shall last. I came this 
time for the express purpose of carefully examining the various points 
and places of interest, to study the man}^ tombs, temples, monuments, 
and mummies, as well as the symbology of Ancient Free Masonry and 
the evidence of its prehistoric existence. 

I first saw the Light in India, the birthplace of our most Illustrious 
Fraternity, and discovered evidences that it was cradled upon the banks 
of the Nile, in the hoary ages of antiquity, long centuries before the 
Babylonian Magi had come into an existence, or the Hebrews were a 
people. I had often rambled with my father, when a boy, from one city 
to another, in order to see for myself the demonstrated thoughts of our 
ancient craftsmen, who had wrought in quarries, for the purpose of 
adorning the banks of the grand old river Nile with magnificient tombs 
and temples, whose very ruins are the wonder and admiration of the 
learned men of this twentieth century. I have stood in awe before many 
of these tombs and temples, and have spent years in careful examina- 
tions, for the express purpose of telling you, my dear brothers and 
readers, the result of my investigations. In this chapter I will describe 
some of the scenes and incidents which charmed and delighted me in 




MOSQUE OF AKBAR, 

CAIRO. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 203 

this grand old city of the Caliphs, " Masr," the Mother of the World, 
" The Precious Diamond in the handle of the green Fan of the Delta." 

One of the first places the student or tourist should visit in this 
wonderful old city of Cairo is the citadel, built by Saladin in 1166 with 
stones that were brought from the small pyramids in the plains of Gizeh. 
It was erected by the ruling power for the express purpose of protecting 
and defending the town from the assault of enemies. This fortress 
most certainly commands the whole city ; but // is commanded by the 
Mokattum hills, which rise immediately above it. Mohammed Ali took 
advantage of this site, Gebel Givitsha^ in 1805, when he was elected by 
the people to become their ruler. 

At this time Khursid, who had been appointed the Turkish Pasha 
by the Sublime Porte, held the citadel until Mohammed Ali, at the head 
of a large body of Albanians, and assisted by the people, planted a 
battery upon the above-named site on the Mokattum hills, whence a con- 
tinuous fire was kept up from -the minaret of the mosque of Sultan 
Hassan, as well as from the battery at Gebel Giyusha, until he finally 
compelled Khursid to surrender the citadel into the hands of the people 
and gave the dominant power to their leader, Mohammed Ali. 

On entering this celebrated fortress and inner court by the New 
Gate and following along a walled passage we come to the Alabaster 
Mosque, erected by Mohammed xA.li, which occupies the site of Saladin's 
old palace, blown up in the year 1824. No one is allowed (European or 
American) to enter into this building without putting on straw or cloth 
shoes, and paying a fee of one piastre. The citadel stands overlooking 
the city, just where the Mokattum hills begin to descend to the plain 
beneath. Here rises the towering walls of this celebrated fortress that 
contain within them a veritable town itself, whose many very interesting 
objects and edifices are really worth seeing. 

It was within the walls of this fortress that the massacre of the 
Mamelukes occurred and to me it was one of the most interesting places 
within its blood-stained walls. After Mohammed Ali had compelled the 
Tvirkish Pasha Khursid to surrender the citadel to him and had received 
the finna7i appointing him Governor of Egypt, his title was disputed 
by nearly every one outside the city of Cairo, but more especially 
by the Mameluke Beys, whose forces had been strengthened by the 



204 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

great majority of the army of Khursid Pasha, who had been deposed by 
Mohammed Ali. This fact caused the Governor to use all means in his 
power to destroy every one opposed to his rule. Therefore, in order that 
you may be enabled to read one of the best accounts of what led up to the 
actual massacre itself, I will quote you from that valuable little work of 
Stanley Lane Poole on " Egypt,'' page i6S : 

"An attempt was made to ensnare certain of the Beys, who were 
encamped north of the metropolis. On the seventeenth of August, 1805, 
the dam of the Canal of Cairo was to be cut and some chief of Mohammed 
Ali wrote informing them that he would go forth early in the morning, 
with most of his troops, to witness the cere-mony, inviting them to enter 
and seize the city, and to deceive them, stipulated for a certain sum of 
money as a reward. The dam, however, was cut early in the preceding 
night, without any ceremony. 

" On the following morning these Beys, with their Mamelukes, a 
very numerous body, broke open the gate of the suburb El-Hoseyniyeh 
and gained admittance into the city from the north through the gate 
called Bab-el-Futuh. They marched along the principal street for some 
distance, with kettle-drums behind each company and were received with 
apparent joy by the citizens. At the mosque called the AslirafiyeJi they 
separated, one party proceeding to the Azhar and the house of certain 
Sheiks, and the other party continuing along the main street and through 
the gate called Bab-Ziiweyleh^ where they turned up towards the Citadel. 
Here they were fired on by some soldiers from the houses and with this 
signal a terrible massacre commenced. 

" Falling back towards their companions, they found the by-streets 
closed, and in that part of the main thoroughfare called Bcyii-el Kasi-eyn^ 
they were suddenly placed between two fires. Thus shut up in a narrow 
street, some sought refuge in the collegiate mosque of the Barkukiyeh^ 
while the remainder fought their way through their enemies and escaped 
over the city wall with the loss of their horses. Two Mamelukefe had in 
the meantime, succeeded by great exertions, in giving the alarm to their 
comrades in the quarter of the Azkar, who escaped by the eastern gate 
called Bab-el-Ghtireyib . 

"A horrible fate awaited those who had shut themselves up in the 
Barkiikiyeh. Having begged for quarter and surrendered, they were im- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 205 

mediately stripped nearly naked, and about fifty were slaughtered on tlie 
spot, while about the same number were dragged away, with the most 
brutal aggravation of their painful condition, to Mohammed AH. Among 
these were four Beys, one of whom, driven to madness by Mohammed 
All's mockery, asked for a drink of water. His hands were untied that he 
might take the bottle, but he snatched a dagger from one of the soldiers, 
rushed at the Pasha and fell covered with wounds. 

" The wretched captives were then chained and left in the court of 
the Pasha's house. On the following morning the heads of their com- 
rades, who had perished the ds.y before, were skinned and stuffed with 
straw before their eyes. One Bey and two other men paid their ransom 
and were released ; the rest, without exception, were tortured and put to 
death in the course of the ensuing night. Eighty-three heads (many of 
them belonging to Frenchmen and Albanians) were stuffed and sent to 
Constantinople, with a boast that the Mameluke chiefs were utterly 
destroyed. This ended Mohammed All's ' first massacre of his two 
confiding victims,' which displays the ferocious and vindictive nature of 
this inhuman brute. 

" The Beys were disheartened bj' this revolting butchery and most of 
them retired to the upper country. Urged by England, or more proba- 
bly by the promise of a bribe from El-Elfj^'s, the Porte began a leisurely 
interference in favor of the Mamelukes ; but the failure of El-Elfy's 
treasury, with a handsome bribe from Mohammed Ali, soon changed the 
Sultan's views and the Turkish fleet sailed away. The cause of the Beys 
then suffered an irreparable loss in the death of their rival leaders, 
El-Elfy and El-Bardisy, whose suicidal jealousy lasted to the end; and 
Mohammed Ali discomfited the chief surviving Bey, Shamin, in a decisive 
battle. An attempt of the English Government to restore the Mame- 
lukes by the action of a force of five thousand men under General Eraser 
ended in disaster and humiliation, and the citizens of Cairo had the satis- 
faction of seeing the heads of Englishmen exposed on stakes in the 
Ezbekiyeh. 

" Mohammed Ali now adopted a more conciliatory policy towards the 
Mamelukes, granting them land and encouraging them to return to 
Cairo. This clemency was only assumed, in order to prepare the way 
for the act of consummate treachery which finally viprooted the Mameluke 



206 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

power, and seated the author of the crime firmly on the throne, where his 
great grandson now sits. Early in the j^ear 1811, the preparation for an 
expedition against the Wahhabis, in Arabia, being complete, all the 
Mameluke Beys then in Cairo were invited to the ceremony of investing 
Mohammed All's favorite son, Tiisiin, with a pelisse and the command of 
the army. As on the former occasion the unfortunate Mamelukes fell 
into the snare. 

" On the ist of March, Shahin Be}' and the other chiefs (one only 
excepted) repaired with their retinues to the Citadel and were cour- 
teously received by the Pasha. Having taken coffee the}^ formed in 
procession and preceded and followed by the Pasha's troops, slowly 
descended the steep and narrow road leading to the great gate of the 
Citadel ; but as soon as the Mamelukes arrived at the gate it was sud- 
denly closed before them. The last of those who made their exit before 
the gate was shut were Albanians, under Sali Kush. To those troops 
their chief now made known the Pasha's orders to massacre all the Mame- 
lukes within the Citadel. Returning by another way, they gained the 
summit of the walls and houses hemming in the road in which the 
Mamelukes were, and some stationed themselves upon the eminences of 
the rock through which the road is partly cut. 

" Thus securely placed, thej^ commenced a heavy fire on their 
defenceless victims, and immediately the troops who closed the procession 
and who had the advantage of higher ground, followed their example. 
Of the betrayed chiefs many were laid low in a few moments ; some 
dismounting and throwing off outer robes, vainly sought, sword in hand, 
to return and escape by some other gate. The few who regained the 
summit of the Citadel experienced the same cruel fate as the rest (for 
those whom the Albanian soldiers made prisoners met with no mercy 
from their chiefs or from Mohammed Ali) ; but it soon became impossible 
for any to retrace their steps, even so far ; the road was obstructed by the 
bleeding bodies of the slain Mamelukes, and their richly-caparisoned 
horses and their grooms. Four hundred and seventy Mamelukes entered 
the Citadel, and of these very fcAv, if any, escaped. One of these is said 
to have been a Bey. According to some, he leaped his horse from the 
ramparts and alighted uninjured, though the horse was killed by the fall. 
Others say that he was prevented from joining his comrades and discov- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 207 

ered the treachery while waiting without the gate. He fled and made his 
■way to Syria. 

" This massacre was the signal for an indiscriminate slaughter of the 
Mamelukes throughout Egypt, orders to this effect being given and trans- 
mitted to every governor. In Cairo itself the houses of the Beys were 
given over to the soldiery, who slaughtered all their adherents, treated 
their women in the most shameless manner, and sacked their dwellings. 
During the two following days, the Pasha and his son Tusun rode about 
the streets and endeavored to stop those atrocious proceedings; but order 
was not restored until five hundred houses had been completely pillaged." 

Such is the account of this terrible massacre, so carefully planned 
and studied out by this ferocious Governor Mohammed Ali, which showed 
very plainly that he would not allow anything to stand in the way of his 
plans of progress. He was devoting the whole of his life and energy to 
the improvement of Eg3'pt and her peoples, building canals, introducing 
printing presses, adopting more advanced ideas of agricultural processes, 
founding schools, etc. He realized that the Mamelukes were bitterly 
opposed to his rule and ideas of progress, hence they had to fall, so that 
Egvpt might rise, and take her stand beside the other nations of the 
world to become a factor in the affairs of Europe. 

Joseph's well as it is called, was discovered by the great Saladin 
when he laid out the site of this celebrated fortress. It was at that time 
filled up with sand ; but after ordering it to be cleaned out he discovered 
that it was a most remarkable excavation of Ancient Egyptian origin, 
composed of two different parts, cut down through the solid rock to the 
depth of two hundred and ninety feet, which depth was supposed to cor- 
respond with the level of the river Nile. 

It is a remarkable specimen of ancient Egyptian industry, persever- 
ance and labor, and dates back beyond authentic history. The first 
part of this most extraordinary well is about one hundred and sixty feet 
in depth and the second or lower part is one hundred and thirty feet 
deeper. A landing marks the division between the upper and lower 
shafts. The bottom of the well is reached by a circular stairway, as near 
as I can remember, about ten feet wide. 

When I first visited this celebrated well the water was raised by 
means of the Sakiyeh, two of which were used for the purpose, one right 



208 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

above the other, both worked by oxen, the water being far different from 
that of the Nile, that which I tasted being quite brackish and unpala- 
table. To-day they do not use the water of this well for drinking or 
household purposes, as the Citadel and city are both supplied with water 
by the Cairo Water Company. 

Before closing my remarks on the Citadel, I desire to call your 
attention, once again, to the celebrated Mosque of Mohammed Ali, whose 
towering minarets are conspicuous from all parts of the city of Cairo and 
its surroundings ; in fact, we may say that these graceful towers form one 
of its landmarks. From the southern side of this Mosque we are enabled 
to obtain one of the most magnificent views, not only of the city, but of 
the surrounding country. Rising directly in front of us is the magnifi- 
cent Mosque of Sultan Hassan, situated just outside the gates of the 
Citadel, and the flat roofs of myriads of houses, nearly all of which are 
adorned with the " nalkaf' or ventilators which, catching the cooling 
breezes of the North Wind, circulates it through the different rooms 
below, making it far more pleasant for the people who live within them. 
We can see the Nile boats down upon the river, loading and unloading 
their cargoes, while some go skimming across the turbid waters like birds 
with their immense lateen sails swelling out before the breeze. We can 
plainly trace the green vegetation that fringes the river until it is lost in 
a misty haze, away off to the South. Rising in silent majesty from the 
plains of Gizeh, to the West, are to be seen the celebrated pyramids of 
Egypt, with the Sphinx crouching in the sand a short distance away from 
the Great Pyramid, still looking to the East, as in the golden days 
of long ago. 

In this queer, quaint old city of Cairo everything seems new, 
strange and full of interest to the traveller. Here the antiquary, student, 
artist, or savant will find a rich field for his especial edification. Every 
street has a history of its own, and every mosque, tower and dome has 
an especial attraction for every one which sees them. There is not 
a building or ruined mosque in Cairo but has its own peculiar charms, 
and around each and every one there is woven a hundred associations of 
early Saracenic history. Every Mosque, dome and slender minaret, 
pointing into the starry vault above are exquisite specimens of ancient 
Saracenic Architecture, that will carry us back to the days of the 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 209 

Crusades. It was from this city that Saladin went forth in all the 
panoply of war, marshalling his Saracenic followers with blare of trumpet 
and rattle of drums, to do battle with Richard the " Lion-hearted " and 
the Crusaders, upon the field of Acre. 

The very stones of which the city is built were priceless treasures 
(in a great many instances) of ancient Pharaonic days, that were torn 
from some of the most ancient cities of the world's history, such as 
Memphis, Heliopolis and others, in order to build up the remarkable city 
of El-Kahira. Standing to-day upon the Mokattum hills, overlooking 
the Citadel and city, we can see the ruins of cities, monuments, tombs, 
and temples which have been the wonder, not only of the ancient, but of 
the modern world. No matter where we turn our gaze something 
will present itself, full of the deepest interest. 

The manners and customs of the people of Eg3'pt, to-day, are in 
many instances like those of the ancient Egyptians in its Golden Age, 
and present the same scenes now as in the days so long gone b3\ Just 
as the physical make up of the inhabitants of this wondrous valley were 
in ancient times, so we find them now, across the threshold of the twentieth 
century. The very style of clothing worn by the lower classes to-day, in 
many parts of this remarkable valley, are identical with that of a prehis- 
toric age. The toiler at the Shaduf, for instance, stands as nude as when 
Pharaoh's daughter saw the infant Moses sleeping on the throbbing 
bosom of old " god Nilus." 

The men who work in the fields and till the soil scratch up the earth 
with the same kind of a machine their great ancestors used in the days 
of Rameses, although there are to be seen now, some of our modern gang 
plows. The poorer class of people may very often be seen plowing with 
a cow and camel hitched together before their primitive machines, toiling 
along in the same way their forefathers did when Joseph was sold into 
the land of bondage. They use the same old method of threshing their 
grain as in the G Iden Age of Egypt, a method that I have described 
in a previous chapter. 

The food of these people who wearily toil in the fields of Egypt, 

consists principally of beans and bread with a sauce composed of onions 

and butter. It is of very rare occurrence for them to partake of meat 

at their tables ; but, upon special occasions they enjoy a sort of cake, 

14 



210 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

something like our cookies, with a fig stuck in the center of it. 
They make their coffee by grinding the bean as fine as flour, boiling it 
as we do chocolate and drinking it in the same way, grounds and all. It 
is a very palatable beverage, and I rather liked it. These people are 
very hospitable, without hypocrisy, and when once you have eaten at 
their table you are especiall}' welcome among them. 

The Bedouins are noted for their hospitality and if you have eaten 
salt with them your person is held sacred while among these sons of the 
desert, who make their homes in the wild wastes of the South and West, 
continually wandering from place to place, restless as the waves of the 
ocean, ever moving. The water-carriers in the larger cities of Egypt 
carry around the waters of the river Nile in skins, just as the ancients 
did in the days of Abraham, and the women, who go down to the river 
to obtain water for household purposes carry the jars upon their heads, 
after the same old style and in the self-same manner as did the Avomen 
who lived in the days of Thothmes and his dynasty. 

In walking through the streets in the evening one can very frequently 
see people performing their devotions, as mentioned in the scriptures. 
Just as mothers carried their children in the days of the builders of the 
Pyramids, straddled upon their shoulders, the infant holding its mother's 
head with its tiny hands, so is the child carried to-day by the mother in 
this celebrated valley of the Nile. When the Mummy of Rameses was 
seen by M. Maspero in the Boulak Museum, Cairo, June i, 1886, his 
hands were henna-stained lying across his " ample breast." Upon many 
of the walls of the ancient tombs of Egypt are to be seen pictures of 
people whose hands are stained red henna colored, and to-day \\\ the 
streets of Cairo and all through the land of Egypt are to be seen hands 
henna-stained, stretched out to lis for baksheesh. The houses of those 
living in ancient times were built, as they are occasionally now, of 
sun-dried bricks, wood and sometimes cane and corn stalks, to last but 
for a day as it were, while their tombs and temples were built of the 
hardest kind of stone, to endure for ever, comparatively speaking. 

As I have stated previously " The peculiar physical make-up of the 
ancient Egyptians are like the inhabitants of to-day." To verify this 
statement I will quote from Maspero's " Dawn of History." A statue 
called Kaapiru was discovered by Mariette Bey, at Sakkara, near 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 211 

Memphis, " The head, torso, arms and even the staff were intact, but the 

pedestal was hopelessly decayed and the statute only kept upright by the 

sand surrounding it. Mariette repaired the statue and placed it in the 

Boulak Museum. Kaapiru when found was the exact likeness of one of 

the ' Sheiks-el-Beled ' or Mayors of the village of Sakkara. The Arab 

workmen noticed the likeness and called it the ' Sheik-el-Beled,' which 

name it has retained ever since. He seems to be coming forward to meet 

the beholder with an acacia staff in his hand, heavy, thick-set, broad 

shoulders of a bull and a common cast of countenance, whose vulgarity 

is not wanting in energy. The largely opened eye has, by a trick of the 

sculptor, an almost uncanny reality about it. The socket which holds it 

has been hollowed out and filled with an arrangement of black and white 

enamel ; a rim of bronze marks the outline of the lids, while a little 

silver peg, inserted at the back of the pupil, reflects the light and gives 

the effect of a living glance. The statue is short in height and was 

carved from pieces of wood that had been fastened together. The statue 

is called by some authors Ra-em-ka. According to the chronological 

table of Mariette, this statue is over six thousand years old," and yet he 

has the same peculiar physical make-up of the men of our own day. 

The donkey boys are quite a feature in Cairo. They are smart, 
quick-witted, well up-to-date, fond of a joke, full of quaint humor and 
love to take trips to the various points of interest in the immediate 
vicinity of Cairo. It is rather funny to see them running along behind 
their enduring little animals, carrying a bunch or wisp of clover for the 
dinner of the little animal that you bestride, and very often eating 
nothing themselves until their day's work is done. These boys and their 
donkeys are to be found at many places in the city, and should you desire 
one at anj^ time during the night, all you would have to do, would be to 
stand out in the street and shout out the Arabic word " /lamrnar" 
(donkey), when you would very soon find yourself surrounded by quite 
a number of them. 

I was never bothered much myself about donkeys, as many of my 
acquaintances were, because I hunted for one that suited me directly I 
arrived in the city and immediately hired it by the week, giving the boy 
extra baksheesh for his care of me during my rambles. I have ridden a 
donkey all over this quaint old city of Cairo and have taken many 



212 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

delightful excursions to various points of interest within a radius of ten 
or twelve miles. One can go around and through the narrow streets of 
this city on donkey-back, and visit the numberless mosques and places 
of interest far better than with any other conveyance. 

In this way I visited a number of celebrated mosques, among them 
The Mosque of Akbar^ the place where the howling and whirling dervishes 
perform their peculiar Zikr. This mosque is a square building with a 
pointed dome, very finely ornamented with arabesque figures. The 
minaret is square and rises over one corner of the building in recessed 
stages. The entrance to the interior of the building is through a very 
fine trifoliate arch, the floor of which is of wood, worn smooth by the 
continual performance of their Zikrs^ each one lasting about an hour. 
The center of the building is circular, fenced with a railing to keep the 
spectators from crowding in too close to the dancers, and the whole 
interior is painted in dark and horizontal bands. 

The celebrated Mosque El-Azhar was founded about A. d. 973 and 
converted into a university by El-Aziz, of the Fatimide dynasty, during 
his rule. Very little of the exterior of this building is to be seen, from 
the fact that it is so enclosed by the houses surrounding it. There is 
nothing of especial architectural interest about this mosque and only a 
small portion of the eastern wall can be seen, which is of but little interest 
to the tourist or student. It has six minarets, erected b}^ different people 
at various periods, some of which are painted in brilliant colors. The ' 
entrances to this mosque are by six gates, the principal one being known 
as the " Gate of the Barbers " (Bab-el-Muzeyinin). It has a very fine 
portal that is extremely interesting, and right here in this entrance many 
students are to be seen under the hands of the tonsorial artists, who con- 
gregate here to make a living by wielding their razors upon the heads 
of those who come here to study. 

This mosque is celebrated as the principal existing Mohammedan 
University. It is the oldest in the history of the world, and ip one of 
the richest institutions of its kind known to-day. It is still growing 
richer, as not a wealthy Mohammedan who dies but bequeaths some of 
his wealth to El-Azhar. There is one good thing about this university, 
no pupil is compelled to pay for his tuition ; but he may, if so disposed, 
contribute toward the expenses of his education. This mosque contains 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 213 

within its archives unbroken records of about nine hundred and twenty 
years and there are to-day in attendance within its courts about nine 
thousand eight hundred students, who are taught by at least two 
hundred and thirty-one sheiks or professors. 

The scholars who attend come from all parts, and wherever the 
Koran is accepted. The education given here includes grammar, arith- 
metic, logic and philosophy, after which they may enter into theology^ 
with the Koran as a text book, enabling them to thoroughly comprehend 
the Mohammedan religion, according to the four great sects of Islam — 
the Shafeite, the Malakite, the Hanafeite and the Hambalite. Every 
student, before he can receive his diploma, must be thorough in all the 
various branches. Here, in this most extraordinary establishment, you 
may see the son of the rich man clad in silk and fine linen, sitting close 
beside those who are very scantily clad, in the coarse cotton garments of 
the peasant, with no evidence of au}^ superiority among them, excepting 
their clothing, each one squatted upon the ground in a semicircle before 
the sheik, who occupies a seat upon a sheepskin rug at the base of one 
of the stone pillars, lecturing his especial class. While others, occupying 
similar positions, with their pupils are reciting passages from the Koran 
in concert, and all the time swaying their heads from side to side, in 
rythmic motion. 

At another column you will hear the professor of another group 
addressing his class in low gutteral Arabic tones upon some especial 
subject in the curriculum of this wonderful old university in Cairo. 
Each sect and nationality has its own particular compartment wherein 
to study, for instance, the Turk is in one, the student from Morocco in 
another, Avhile those that come from Algeria and other places are to be 
found in a separate compartment by themselves. A visit to this cele- 
brated university of El-Azhar will well repay any one for the time 
and trouble. 

TAe Mosque of Sultan Hassan stands immediately below the Citadel, 
and is considered to be one of the most beautiful specimens of Arabian 
architecture known to-day, ranking as one of the most superb and famous 
buildings in the City of Cairo. The foundation of this magnificent 
edifice was laid in the year A. D. 1356, and was completed in the 3-ear 
A. D. 1360. The high and lofty porch is a marvel of beauty, command- 



214 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

ing the attention of all who visit it. The towering walls inclose a 
spacious court, and rise to the height of one hundred and thirteen feet, 
corbelled out fully six feet in successive lines of dentils that form a most 
magnificent cornice, beneath which are to be seen panels, arches and 
windows. This mosque is surmounted by two minarets and a painted 
brick dome, which rises over the mausoleum of the Sultan. 

The minaret on the South is the highest in the world, being fully 
two hundred and eighty feet high. The other one was overthrown by an 
earthquake, killing an immense number of people in its fall. It was 
again rebuilt, but not according to its original dimensions. The stones 
that were used in the construction of this magnificent building were taken 
from the Pyramids. It is a well-known fact that the monuments, tombs 
and temples of ancient Egypt were used by the Arabs simply as a quarry, 
wherewith to build up their own quaint city of Cairo, and it is very much 
to be regretted that the priceless monuments of the golden age of Egypt 
should ever have been destroyed to supply materials for the upbuilding 
of that city. This mosque has been the chief center or rallying point for 
all who rebel against the government or ruling power. Mohammed 
Ali took possession of it, and used it as a fortress in order to drive 
Khursid Pasha from the Citadel. It bears the scars of many a hard 
fought battle, and to-day there are to be seen upon its walls the 
effects of the cannonading by the French when the inhabitants of 
this grand old city revolted against their rule. There are many other 
mosques and tombs that are well worth a visit, more especially the 
following : 

The Tombs of the Circassian Mamehikes generally known, as The 
Tombs of the Khalifs. The Tomb of Kait Bey is a beautiful specimen of 
Arabian architecture. It is not a large mosque, but its small dimensions 
are full of most exquisite grace and beauty. Fergusson, in his " Hand- 
book of Architecture," says : " This mosque, looked at externally or 
internally, nothing can exceed the grace of every part of this bi^ilding. 
Its small dimensions exclude it from any claim of grandeur, nor does it 
pretend to the purity of the Greek and some other styles ; but as a perfect 
model of the elegance we generally associate with the architecture of this 
people, it is perhaps unrivalled by anything in Egypt, and far surpasses 
the Alhambra or the Western buildings of its age." 




MOSQUE OF SULTAN HASSAN, 

CAIRO. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 215 

There is upon the slopes of the Mokattum hills the celebrated Tomds 
of the Mamelukes^ well worth a visit, for amid the ruins are to be found 
some very fine specimens of Arabian architecture, with here and there 
some very beautiful minarets which will deeply interest any one willing 
to take the trouble of visiting this place and to hunt them up. 

One of the best known places in Cairo is the Esbekiyeh^ a public 
garden, which was named in honor of the Emir Ezbek, a celebrated 
general of the Sultan Kait Bey, one of the independent Mameluke Sul- 
tans who reigned in the year A. D. 1468. Originally there was a mosque 
erected here ; but during the rule of Mohammed Ali it was simply a pond 
of water, formed by the inundations of the Nile, until he altered the site 
and laid out a garden, by filling in the pond and cutting a canal around 
it. Said Pasha improved upon what Mohammed had done ; but it was 
not until Ishmael Pasha improved it by tearing down the old and build- 
ing up anew that it reached its present state of perfection. 

The gardens of to-day have beautiful walks and contain a very rare 
and choice collection of trees, shrubs and flowers. During the afternoon 
it is simply delightful to promenade the many charming pathways that 
wind around these beautiful grounds, Avith an area of over twenty acres. 
It contains a variety of places of amusement, such as cafes, a theatre and 
surrounding it are quite a number of the principal hotels. During the 
evening, from five to eight, either an Egyptian or an English band 
performs there. It used to be the special rendezvous for Americans and 
Europeans, but now it is used by all classes of people, and we may often 
see the veiled wives with their children, of both the rich and poor Arabs, 
promenading among the trees, shaded from the noonday sun, rubbing up 
against travellers and tourists from all parts of the world. What a 
contrast exists among them ! Such a motley assemblage of people, and 
what a confusion of tongues. In these gardens one may hear nearly 
every language spoken upon the face of the earth. I have spent many a 
very pleasant evening in this delightful spot in listening to the band, 
watching the people, catching a few sentences from those who pass along, 
and pondering upon the rise and fall of nations and the mutations in 
Egypt. 

The site of the celebrated old city of Heliopolis is situated about 
six miles to the northeast of Cairo, and the route to it lies along a very 



216 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

nice carriage road which passes through many places of historical 
interest to a person visiting the ruins of this celebrated city, one of the 
oldest in the history of the world. 

How well I remember my trip to the various places I am about to 
describe. It seems to me but as yesterday that I came down the steps of 
Shepherd's Hotel and found my donkey and boy awaiting me, as well as 
a very large party of acquaintances and friends, who were going to make 
the trip with me. What a jolly, happy, rollicking, joyous lot we were, 
as we mounted our little animals, and skurried along the road, shouting 
and laughing, like so many school boys, as we started out to visit the 
various points of interest that lie along our pathway, which led us on 
to where Joseph found his wife, in the grand old cit}- of Beih-Shemesh, 
On, or the ciiy of the Sun, Heliopolis. 

We rode out of the city at a rapid rate and kept it up until we 
reached a place where we stopped to arrange our refreshments, carried 
with us for luncheon ; after which we started on our way again, passing 
quite a number of modern European residences and at length arrived at a 
rather peculiar looking building that is used as a Commissariat Depot of 
the English Army. During the French occupation it was used as a 
stronghold and was called Fort Zulkowski. The places where the 
loopholes used to be are in sight to-day. 

Close to this place we passed through a gateway called Bab-el- 
Hasaniya and found ourselves upon the road leading to Abbasiya. We 
passed an Arabian tomb with a very fine sculptured dome, and still 
pushing along we see a public drinking fountain on our right, at which 
we refreshed ourselves and animals, after which we kept riding along 
until we arrived at and passed the barracks which were occupied by the 
English and Egyptian troops. We noticed the Astronomical Obser- 
vatory and the Zaffaren Palace which Ishmael Pasha is said to have built 
in forty days, and then presented it to his mother. We now begin to 
realize that our way leads us on through pleasant paths, for our route is 
lined with orange and lemon groves, and vineyards that fringe the desert 
sands, showing what irrigation can do in reclaiming the arid sands of the 
desert. We now enter upon a beautiful shaded avenue and pass through 
some very finely cultivated grounds, until we arrive at the Palace of 
Qubba, which Ishmael built for his son Tewfik. We do not stop here, but 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 217 

continue along througli groves and vine3'ards and through a beautiful 
olive orchard, coming out into a v&vy richly cultivated plain, the scene 
of two decisive battles, long destined to live in the annals of Egyptian 
History. The first was when the Sultan Selim, on the twenty-sixth day 
of January, 15 17, destroyed the power of the Mamelukes and made it a 
Turkish province. The second was on the twenty-first day of March, 
iSoo, when the French, under General Kleber, conquered the Turks and 
regained Cairo. 

We arrived at Matariyeh, the village near where these two battles 
were fought, and visited a living spring of water noted for being the only 
one in the valley of the Nile. Tradition informs us that originally the 
water flowing from it was salty ; but that when the Holy F^amily visited 
this village " Our Lady, the Virgin Mother " bathed in it, when immedi- 
ately it became soft and sweet. It was here in this place that were located 
the famous gardens belonging to Cleopatra, wherein grew the precious 
balsam, the true " Balm of Gilead," spoken of in the Scriptures ; but, to- 
day, cotton has taken its place, and the balsam plants have been removed 
to Arabia where they flourish under the fostering care of the people who 
have charge of them. A short distance beyond the village we came to an 
old s3'camore, called " The Virgin's Tree," from the fact, as tradition 
informs us again, the Holy Family rested beneath its spreading branches 
after their flight into " The Land of Egypt." About half a mile farther 
on we come to the site of Heliopolis and immediately recognize one 
peculiarity about it, that there were no heaps and mounds of rubbish 
representing the remains of the walls, tombs, temples, etc., for like 
Alemphis, it too has been a quarr}' for the upbuilding of Cairo. 

In the ancient days of Egypt this city was in the height of its glory, 
the very fact of Usertesen's obelisk standing there to-da}' proves its 
antiquity and links it with the beginning of the Middle Empire, in the 
year b. c. 3604. During the time that Mariette Bey was excavating here 
in 1S58 he unearthed a great man 3^ stones bearing the names of Rameses 
Second and Thothmes Third, both of whom, no doubt, beautified and 
adorned some of the temples in this ancient cit3^ of On. It was celebrated 
for its temple of the Sun, which was a most magnificent edifice, standing 
at one end of an inclosure fully three miles in circumference, and leading 
up to it, from the entrance, were rows of beautiful sphinxes and obelisks. 



218 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

The priests of Heliopolis were famous for their learning, and enjoyed the 
reputation of being the most learned men of their age. There Solon, 
Eudoxus and man}- others came to study and acquire some of the wisdom 
that flowed forth from their celebrated fountain, the college of priests, and 
yet, to-day, there is no remains of this most magnificent city standing to 
mark the spot where Moses drew his inspiration, nothing to tell of its 
vanished glory and the splendor of its tombs, temples and monuments, 
excepting one solitary obelisk to testify to the ancient grandeur and 
departed glory which existed b. c. 3000. 

This obelisk is made of rose granite, and the length of the stone 
measures sixty-six feet, with an average face at the ground of six feet and 
one inch. The pyramidium or apex shows that it was encased at one 
time with a metal covering, and the inscriptions which are blazoned upon 
its stony sides inform us that Usertesen First (Ra-Kheper-Ka), King of 
Upper and Lower Egypt, dedicated and erected this monument at the 
beginning of a thirty years' cycle. There is only one other obelisk older 
than this, which is a very much smaller stone, and was found by Lepsius 
at Memphis. 

Close to this ancient monolith we spread our luncheon, and amidst 
the popping of corks, the clatter of knives and forks, we feasted and 
talked of the wonderful civilization that belonged to these people, in the 
hoary ages of the past, whose architecture has been admired by people of 
every age, and continues to be the wonder and admiration of the people 
of the twentieth century, as in every other. We discussed the decadence 
of her Arts, Sciences and Philosophies, since the " Golden Age of Egypt," 
and the wonderful changes in the valley of the Nile and Delta since this 
grand old monument was quarried and erected on the borders of the desert 
in the city of Beth-shemesh (Heliopolis) close upon thirty centuries B. C. 

It was to this city the Phoenix used to come, once in every five 
hundred years to reincarnate. This most extraordinary Arabian bird 
is said to have been the size of a full grown turkey, with ^ the most 
beautiful plumage imaginable. Tradition informs i:s that about the 
time that this Arabian wonder was to arrive to reincarnate, a priest of 
the temple would prepare a fire upon an altar within its sacred precincts, 
into which the bird would fly and be consumed. The fire would then 
be allowed to die out and the embers to remain undisturbed for a certain 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 219 

number of days after, when the reincarnated bird would be seen to arise 
from the ashes, spread out its golden wings and with a plumage most 
exquisite soar away into the infinitude of space. There is no question 
but that this is an allegor}^ which every one must interpret for 
himself 

There is one peculiar thing to be noticed in this wonderful valley 
of the Nile and that is there are three Sabbaths observed here. The 
first Friday — that of the Mohammedan. Saturday — that of the Hebrew 
and Sunday the Christian Sabbath. In fact, every day of the week is a 
Sabbath da}- to some nationality ; for Monday is the Greek, Tuesday is 
the day of rest for the Persians, and Wednesday is the Sunday for the 
Assyrians. So you see every day is the Lord's day and is observed 
as such by different people in different places. 

" The mean annual temperature at Cairo is about 71° F. The 
thermometer seldom falls to 40° F. at Cairo, but it is frequently lower 
on the Nile. The coldest months in the year are December and January 
and the hottest are June, Jul}' and August, but even then it is cool in 
the shade and at nights. The humidit}' in the atmosphere is principally 
controlled by the rise and fall of the Nile. Fogs prevail during the first 
two months of the receding of the waters. Evening fogs descend very 
quickly as the sun goes down and are as quickly deposited after the sun 
has set, leaving the sky clear and the air as fresh as after a good shower. 
Morning fogs are soon dispelled by the heat of the sun, and then follows 
the clear beautiful sky. On the desert the air is always dry and bracing 
and much cooler than that over cultivated land. Dews at night are 
common in the earl}' and latter parts of the year. During the winter 
the nights are piercingly cold on the desert. The moonlight nights are 
singularly brilliant and when there is no moon the starlit sky is as 
wonderful as any moonlight night in Europe." (Murray.) 



^sottrir ^cacfttng of tT)f g>tottisTj Xiiit 
Brain antr Efjougijt, 



'Man 19 made ■Jt*cc !— Man, by birthright is free, 

"Chough the tyrant may deem him but bom for his tool. 
Whatever the shout of the rabble may be — 

Whatever ranting misuse of the fool — 
Still fear not the Slave, when be breaks from his chain, 
for the Man made a freeman grows safe in his gain." 



222 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 223 



CHAPTER X. 

ESOTERIC TEACHING OF THE SCOTTISH RITE— BRAIN AND THOUGHT. 

IN speaking of this wonderful city of Heliopolis, " Fountain of the 
Sun," one of the most sacred cities of Egyptian history, I desire to 
call your attention to the knowledge pertaining to our Ancient 
Brethren, who officiated here, in the " College of Priests," " The Grand 
East of Ancient Egypt.'''' Here was the seat of the wisdom which belonged 
to the " Phree-Massen " whose teachings have been handed down to us, 
from generation to generation. Here Moses was initiated into the Sub- 
lime Mysteries of Ancient Egypt, of which our own beloved Ancient and 
Accepted Scottish Rite is a lineal descendant. Those Elus, Knights and 
Princes of every age who have ever followed the Pole Star of Truth 
through the drifting ages of time have handed down to us, from epoch to 
epoch, the wonderous knowledge taught in the Indian, Mazdean and 
Egyptian Mysteries, for the especial benefit of our Illustrious Fraternity. 
By this future generations are eventually enabled to stand upon the 
topmost rung of the ladder, the very pinnacle of Civil and Religious 
Liberty, when every Man and Mason shall be free from all usurpations of 
royalt}? and sacerdotal power, and be thoroughly competent to recognize 
the whole Truth in the Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood of Man. 
Masonry, successor of the mysteries, still follows the ancient manner 
of teaching. Her ceremonies are like the ancient mystic shows — not the 
reading of an essay, but the opening of a problem, requiring research and 
constituting philosophy the arch expounder. The symbols are the instruc- 
tion she gives. The lectures are endeavors, often partial and one-sided, 
to interpret these symbols. He who would become an accomplished 
Mason must not be content merely to hear, or even to understand, the 
lectures ; he must, aided by them, and they having, as it were, marked 
out the way for him ; study, interpret, and develop these symbols for 
himself. 



224 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

The Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Masonry is like an immense 
tree, towering up into the glorious heights of Scientific Philosophy, 
whose ramifying branches spread o'er a vast area, enfolding in its arms 
the Light, Knowledge and Truth of all the Arts, Sciences, Religions and 
Philosophies of every age in the world's history; whose roots are watered 
by that great and glorious fount from which Moses drew his inspiration and 
knowledge. In fact this tree is the ^'^ fons et origo " of the " Wisdom '' 
itself, which can be clearly demonstrated to all those who climb iip into 
its glorious height. When the Neophyte first stands beneath its over- 
shadowing branches, in darkness visible, with ambition to know and 
understand the unknowable, his higher self will then prompt him to 
greater exertions. Clinging and climbing, he struggles upward and 
onward, grasping blindly for Light, until he stands upon the first of its 
multifarious branches. With awe and admiration he then begins to 
realize the Sublimity and Grandeur to be found in the very shadows of 
its magnificent foliage. He sees far above him scintillations of great and 
glorious Truths, descending through the drifting ages, to and across the 
threshold of the twentieth century, and will begin to understand what 
the poet meant when he said : 

' ' Heaven is not reached at a single bound ; * 
But we build the ladder by which we rise 
From the lowly earth to the vaulted skies, 
And we mount to the summit round by round." 

It is so with the Neophyte. He will begin to realize that Heaven 
(Wisdom) is not gained by a single bound ; but is only to be obtained by 
mounting step by step, or degree by degree. Beset with many difficulties, 
and dangers, as he advances his view widens out, his horizon expands, for 
the Pole Star of Truth and Right has been his guide. Although he 
stands in the very shadow of Death, yet will he learn that within his own 
heart he carries the light which shall lead him through the valley of the 
shadow, to more sublime heights of the Ineffable degrees of our beloved 
fraternity. He will realize that there is no Death, for what we call Death 
is simply the disintegration of molecular forms, to be made manifest 
eventually in many others. 

This disintegration of the physical body of man, animals, plants, 
etc., occurs as soon as the life forces or controlling soul departs. The mass 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 225 

of living elemental units, composing the physical body of man, being no 
longer controlled or co-ordinated, separate one from the other, putrefaction 
or decay ensues, and the body becomes a mass of unrestrained, unregu- 
lated lives, destroying the form or body by their own especial forces. 
The physical body of either man or animal once more becomes the dust 
of the earth, and he will now realize the Truth of the statement, " Though 
I die yet shall I live," for we must distinctly understand that Death is 
merely the Inn by the wayside, simply the bier upon which the bodj' is 
laid. He will eventually realize that all men must pass through the gates 
of Death before they can enter on the road that leads to immortality. 
Death does not annihilate the true spiritual 7nan^ but just simply destroys 
the form or personality, the old shard or shell, the tegument of clay that 
has been the house in which the individuality, or higher self, has been 
enabled to manifest itself on the physical plane. And in reaching Death 
he must thoroughly understand that he has suffered, and will become 
purified, so that the works of the Divine Essence might be exemplified in 
him. Through the glory of Life, Man must mourn, sorrow, suffer pain and 
humiliation to the personality, while He, the true 7nan^ will know full 
well it is simply a refining process to bring him out purified. When 
man stands erect in his God-hood, before the Divine Glory of Light and 
Truth, with arms outstretched, and head uplifted, in conscious knowledge 
of Divine Love, willing to accept his Karma, then the cross will fall behind 
him and he will realize that he stands before his Higher Self, the Divine 
Presence of the Supreme Architect, and positi'vel}' know that he and his 
Father are One. He will thoroughly understand that Resignation is 
what brings him perfect peace and happiness, and unlocks the door 
leading to Immortal bliss. 

This faint glimmer of the Truth and proof of the immortality of 
the soul, proves to the initiate that he has passed froin the square to 
the compasses, whose swinging leg circumscribes every moral virtue ; 
in fact, he realizes that he has gone beyond the operative tools and now 
uses those of the speculative Mason. The instruments used by the 
Sages of the ancient world will now become familiar to him, and in 
their use he will discover that he has now risen to a higher plane of 
intellectual development, to a knowledge of Truth and the key to the 
Lost Word. I\Iany things will now become clearer to his vision and 
15 



226 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

understanding, from these ineffable heights of Scottish Rite Masonry. 
He will see in the Pole Star a fit emblem of the Deity, a point within the 
circle of Eternity. Now is the opportunity for him to devote his time 
and attention to solving the great problems of life, to enable him to 
understand those sublime philosophical Truths permeating our beloved 
Fraternity. In attaining to a knowledge of these lofty Truths he should 
strive earnestly and faithfully to give them, just as freely as he received 
them, to his aspiring Brother by the wayside. Such a perfect Mason 
will be ever true to himself and the glorious fraternity to which he 
belongs. Like the ancient initiates of the Egyptian Mysteries he will 
faithfully obey the law and be true to the principles of Scottish Rite 
Masonry. Always ready to draw his sword in defense of his country 
for the preservation of free government, never consenting to despotism 
or civil or military usurpation, he will be guided and directed solely 
by honor and duty. 

What the world of to-day, and even generations yet unborn, owe to 
Masonry and our glorious Scottish Rite will never be fully realized. 
Our fraternity has always been and always will be an incentive to 
enlightenment, liberality and education. During the " Dark Ages," in 
the Lodge room only did scientists and philosophers dare make known 
any of their important scientific discoveries, for fear of the Inquisition, 
that dread tool of tyrants and benighted superstition. To-day we 
find our beloved Rite working earnestly and faithfully in the interest 
of suffering humanity, to secure for all freedom of thought and free 
government, for the people and by the people. Our Elus, Knights 
and Princes of the twentieth century have an advantage over ancient 
Brethren in being able to exemplify openly the grand Truths taught 
behind the closed doors of our most illustrious bodies of the Scottish 
Rite, throughout the world universal. The faithful manner in which 
these duties are being performed are only known to the co-workers in 
the great and glorious undertaking of that which is Jiist, right and true. 
We realize that we should not live for ourselves ; but devote our time 
to the welfare of our country, our neighbors, and practice charity 
toward all men in the fullest sense of the word, recognizing in every 
man a brother, and above all practice se/f-less-ness in all our dealings 
with our fellow man, without hope of honor or reward. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 227 

Once more I quote from "Morals and Dogmas," page 312: "The 
true Mason labors for the benefit of those to come after him, and for 
the advancement and improvement of his race. It is a poor ambition 
which contents itself within the limits of a single life. All men who 
desire to live, desire to survive their funerals, and to live afterward in the 
good which they have done mankind rather than in the fading characters 
written in men's memories. Most men desire to leave some work behind 
them which may outlast their own day and brief generation. This is an 
instinctive impulse, given by God, and often found in the rudest human 
heart ; tlie surest proof of the soul's immortality and of the fundamental 
difference between men and the wisest brutes. To plant trees that, 
after we are dead, will shelter our children, is as natural as to love the 
shade of those our fathers planted. The rudest, unlettered husbandman, 
painfully conscious of his own inferiority, the poorest widowed mother, 
giving her life-blood to those who pay only for the work of her needle, 
will toil and stint themselves to educate their child that he may take a 
higher station in the world than they ; and of such children are the 
world's greatest benefactors." 

The first inhabitants of Egypt brought with them the eternal verities 
of the ancient wisdom from India, the birth place of the Aryan Hindu, 
the last offshoot of the first sub-race of the fifth Root race, who most as- 
suredly preserved the secrets of the glorious teachings we so dearly love 
and practice to-day, in Scottish Rite Masonry. They are the self-same 
esoteric Truths taught by the Hierophants and Sages in the hoary ages 
of antiquit}^, during the initiatory services of the mysteries of India, by 
the Brotherhood of the White Lodge^ the Hierarchy of Adepts, whose 
every thought and act has been for the upbuilding of humanity. These 
are the Brothers who have preserved the sublime Truths and teachings 
we are endeavoring to promulgate in our Lodges, Chapters, Councils and 
Consistories, of both the Southern and the Northern Jurisdictions of the 
Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite, throughout the world Universal. 

There has never existed a time, in the history of the world, when 
the teachings of those Great Adepts were not being given forth, in order 
to help poor struggling humanity on to a higher plane of intelligence 
and spiritual unfoldment. We must distinctly understand that a vast 
number of these great and glorious Truths are embodied in all Religions 



228 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

and Philosophies and are not new, but as old as the stars above. The 
scriptures tell us : " Eiii Chodosh tacasJi ha sheviesh " (There is no new- 
thing under the sun) See Eccles. isi Chap, and gtJi verse. That man would 
be more than a God who could invent or discover anything which has 
never been in existence before. Ragon, in " Maconnerie Occulte," states 
that " Humanity only seems to progress in achieving one discovery after 
the other, as in truth it only finds that which it had lost. Most of our 
modern inventions, for which we claim such glory, are after all, things 
people were acquainted with three or four thousand years back. Lost to 
us through wars, floods, and fire their very existence became obliterated 
from the memory of man. And now modern thinkers begin to rediscover 
them once more" (see Chapters III and XIV of this work). 

When the Ancient Craftsmen erected the Pyramids and carved the 
Sphinx upon the banks of the Nile, they must assuredly have been 
able to manufacture their tools in order to perform the work necessary in 
constructing such remarkable monuments. We have ocular demonstra- 
tions that they thoroughly comprehended the quarrying and carrying 
across the desert sands of Egypt, enormous blocks of stone, and raising 
them to the required position by methods peculiarly their own, to 
erect Tombs, Temples and colossal statuary to beautify and adorn the 
wonderous cities in the valley of the Nile. These ruins are scattered 
throughout its length and breadth and constitute fragmentary records of 
those ancient craftsmen, which to-day give evidence of their marvelous 
knowledge and skill, not only in Architecture, but in the Arts and 
Sciences. 

Let us look back at the stupenduous buildings which adorned the 
banks of the Tigris and Euphrates, long centuries before Rhea Silvia 
officiated in the temples of Alba Longa and gave birth to Romulus and 
Remus. Let us follow in the footsteps of the men who delved into and 
unearthed the secrets of that Babylonian Empire, and we shall be 
astonished at the profound knowledge that pertained to this, ancient 
people, who erected the " Hanging Gardens of Babylon " simply to 
gratify the whim of a daughter of Ebactana. Let us cross the dark 
waters of the Indian Ocean, and visit the " Land of the Vedas," where 
we may examine the most magnificent Gopuras and Cave Temples. We 
may here receive ocular demonstrations of the sublimity and grandeur 







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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 229 

of tbese extremely beautiful fabrics, which are the wonder and admira- 
tion of our learned men of the twentieth century. My dear Brothers and 
readers, the farther back we go into the realms of distant ages, searching 
for the wisdom and knowledge belonging to Brothers of a prehistoric age, 
the more will we be confronted with unmistakable evidences of their great 
learning and most extraordinary intellectual and spiritual development. 
We will recognize in the magnificent monuments of India, iVssyria and 
the Valley of the Nile, tokens of their knowledge in Astronomy, as 
well as the state of perfection to which they had arrived in Mechanics, 
Mathematics, Architecture, etc. Besides these we have proof of the 
existence of a Science, which men of the present day cannot properly 
understand or interpret, or at best only dimly sense. Right here I will 
positively assert that all Religions, all Philosophies, and all Sciences for 
this Race had their origin in the "Land of the Vedas," whose links 
can be traced back to its original source, broken and disfigured as 
they are, yet still with fragments here and there to connect us with the 
glory belonging to the Ancient Wisdom of the " Great White Lodge," 
which was at its zenith when Science, Philosophy and Religion walked 
hand in hand together. 

These great and glorious Adepts inherited all the wisdom belong- 
ing to the Atlanteans and Lemureans, whose mighty traditions they 
thoroughly comprehended, but which cannot be told to us, as we would 
be unable to understand them. These Great Teachers were the origin- 
ators of a system of Philosophy that we of the present day are just 
beginning to comprehend. There is no man of this era who can truth, 
fully say that the Sciences known to us of the twentieth century were 
unknown to our Ancient Brethren of India. The teachings of Anaxago- 
ras, Empedocles, Democritus and others are being taught to-day in our 
schools and colleges. Gallileo was not the first map to discover the 
motions of the earth. The rotation of this planet upon its axis, as well 
as the heliocentric system, were taught by Pythagoras and others B. c. 700. 
As above stated, the motions of the earth were understood at this earl}- 
date, and yet during the reign of the Emperor Constantine, in the year 
A. D. =-17, his son Crispus Cseser was taught by his preceptor, Lactantius, 
that the earth was a plane surrounded by the sky, the earth itself being 
composed of fire and water ; and his venerable preceptor, the Holy 



230 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

Father, warned him against believing in the heretical doctrine of the 
earth's globular form. 

Who can add or take away from Euclid and improve upon him? 
Many of the old Philosophers and Scientists of the ancient days had 
probably forgotten, during their lives, more than all our modern Scientists 
ever knew. What should we have known of the application of the 
theory of mathematics, for practical purposes, if it had not been for 
Archytus, the pupil of Pythagoras? 

The Priests of Etruria, as well as the ancient Rishis of India, 
thoroughly understood the method whereby they could attract lightning, 
long centuries before Christ. What will better illustrate the peculiar 
methods of the teachings of the various ages, my readers will more fully 
understand, when they begin to search for themselves and find the truth 
of these statements, verified b}^ the best writers of every epoch of the 
world's history. I know that it is very difficult to convince people of the 
truth of many things, more especially when these things clash with their 
preconceived ideas aud notions of what is true or what is false. It is 
also very difficult to get men to believe and agree upon matters be3'ond 
their comprehension. 

Suppose a man requested me to teach him square root without his 
having any knowledge of the first four rules of arithmetic ; no matter 
how hard I tried to explain to him that the squares of the base and 
perpendicular equal the square of the hypothenuse, and that by adding 
the results of the squares of the two sides and extracting the square root 
from the sum of the sides would give him the required side of the hypo- 
thenuse. Why, it would be like talking Greek to him, he could not 
understand me, and it would be impossible for him so to do, until he had 
first mastered the basic principles : Addition, Subtraction, Multiplication 
and Division, as then, and then only, could he understand me and acquire 
a knowledge of Square Root. 

Pythagoras was one of the greatest Philosophers of ancient Europe. 
He was the son of Mesarchus, an engraver, and was born about the year 
B. c. 580, either at Samos, an island in the ^gean Sea, or as some say, at 
Sidon in Phoenicia. Very little is known of his early life, beyond the 
fact that he won prizes for feats of agilit}^ at the Ol3^mpic Games. 
Having attained manhood and feeling dissatisfied with the amount of 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 231 

knowledge to be gained at home, he left his native land and spent many- 
years in travel, visiting in turn most of the great centres of learning. 
History narrates that his pilgrimage in search of Wisdom extended to 
Egypt, India, Persia, Crete and Palestine, and from each country he 
gathered fresh stores of information and succeeded in becoming well 
acquainted with the esoteric Wisdom, as well as with the popular esoteric 
knowledge of each. He returned to his home, with his mind well 
stored and his judgment matured, intending to open there a college of 
learning ; but this he found to be impracticable, owing to the opposition of 
its turbulent ruler, Polycrates. Failing in this design he migrated to 
Crotona, a noted city in Magna Grascia, and a colony founded by the 
Dorians, on the South coast of Italj-. It was here this ever famous 
Philosopher founded his College or Society of students, which became 
known over the civilized world as the " Grand East," or central assembly 
of the learned men of Europe. It was here, too, that Pythagoras taught 
the Occult Wisdom gathered from the Gymnosophists and Brahmins of 
India, from the Hierophants of Egj'pt, the Oracles of Delphi, the Idean 
Cave and from the Kabbalah of the Hebrew Rabbis and Chaldean Magi. 

For nearly forty years he taught his pupils and exhibited his won- 
derful powers ; but ail end was put to his institution and he was forced to 
flee from the city, owing to a conspiracy and rebellion which arose on 
account of a quarrel between the people of Crotona and the inhabitants of 
Sybaris. He succeeded in reaching Metapontum, where he is said to 
have died about the year b. c. 500. Pythagoras was intensely in earnest 
in his search for learning and a comprehensive knowledge of the pro- 
found and lofty Sciences possessed by the ancient Eg}"ptian Hierophants. 
He was so very anxious to obtain all the esoteric secrets pertaining to 
the Ancient Eg3'ptian Mysteries, that he consented to be circumcised that 
he might be eligible to become an Initiate, after which he was made 
familiar with the occult teachings of the Egyptian Hierophants. 

Pythagoras founded the Grecian Mysteries and taught to his pupils 
all that he had learned from the Gymnosophists, Brahmins and Hiero- 
phants. It was within the Temples of these people that he studied the 
Hermetic Sciences and came to an understanding of the revelations of the 
Sybils ; but he learned the geometrical theories in the Temples of Egypt. 
He was an apt scholar himself and grasped very readil}^ all those high 



232 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

and lofty Sciences in which he had been instructed, until he stood pre- 
eminently above all the Philosophers of Ancient Europe, demonstrating 
this fact to all who studied under him. 

Our revered Brother, Albert Pike, in "Morals and Dogmas," page 
366, states that: " He taught the true method of obtaining a knowledge 
of the Divine Law ; to purify the soul from its imperfections, to searcb 
for Truth, and to practice virtue ; thus imitating the perfections of God. 
He thought his system vain, if it did not contribute to expel vice and 
introduce virtue into the mind. He taught that the two most excellent 
things were to speak the truth and to render benefits to one another. 
Particularly he inculcated Silence, Temperance, Fortitude, Prudence and 
Justice. He taught the immortality of the Soul, the Omnipotence of 
God, and the necessity of personal holiness to qualify a man for admission 
into the Society of the Gods. Thus we owe the particular mode of 
instruction in the Degree of Fellow-Craft to Pythagoras ; and that degree 
is but an imperfect reproduction of his lectures. From him, too, we have 
many of our explanations of the symbols. He arranged his assemblies 
due East and West, because the Master represents the rising Sun, and of 
course must be in the East. The pyramids, too, were built precisel}' by 
the four cardinal points. And our expression that our Lodges extend 
upward to the Heavens, come to us from the Persian and Druidic custom 
of having to their Temples no roof but the sky." 

" Thales, Orpheus, Pherecydes, Anaxagoras, Solon, Plato, in fact, all 
the ancient Philosophers visited Egypt for the express purpose of acquiring 
' more light ' in those wondrous realms of Mysticism, Metaphysics, and 
transcendental Anthropology, because they could not in their own coun- 
tries get that higher and more intimate knowledge of Divine or Spiritual 
ideas which they so earnestly desired. They thoroughly realized that the 
sublime teachings of the ancient Egyptians were not cognized by the 
uninitiated, and, in fact, thoroughly comprehended they were not enabled, 
from the teachings received, to delve deeply into the ethereal realm of 
Thought or Being, and all they were enabled to comprehend was merely 
the phenomenal, cognizable by their senses alone (' we must ever remem- 
ber that with our physical senses alone at our command none of iis can 
hope to reach beyond gross matter ') they distinctly understood that their 
investigations could go so far and no farther, but they positively knew 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 233 

that here, in Egypt, all those sublime teachings and glorious Truths, for 
which they had been searching, and so earnestly desired to comprehend, 
were to be found in the Ancient Egyptian Mysteries." 

Every one of those ancient Philosophic Craftsmen, who lifted the 
veil of the Greater Mysteries and received the " Light " of those sublime 
teachings, which were the wonder of the ancient world, began to under- 
stand that before he or they could receive the Diviue Wisdom so earnestly 
desired he would have to go from below upwards, and in order to attain to 
higher planes, he would have to build the ladder within himself, so as to 
rise above his lower, and free his higher self, that he might consciously 
know and understand all the causes " that have made him what he is, and 
that shall make him what he will be." 

An oracle of Apollo, quoted by Euscbius, states that the " Egyptians 
were the first who disclosed by infinite actions the path that leads to the 
gods. The oracle is as follows : 

"The path by which to Deity we climb, 
Is arduous, rough, ineffable, sublime; 
And the strong massive gates, through which we pass, 
In our fust course, are bound with chains of brass. 
Those men the first, who of Egyptian birth, 
Drank the fair waters of Nilotic earth, 
Disclosed by actions infinite this road, 
And man>- ])aths to God I'luenicians showed, 
This road the Assyrians pointed out to view, 
And this the Lydians and Chaldeans knew." 

Showing that the religions of the Egyptians comprised the essentials 
of all others, and that their moral code was both pure and exalted. But 
the real iialurc and attributes of God could only be communicated to such 
as were initiated into the Mysteries, and gave unquestionable proofs of 
their fidelity and zeal. And to the initiate it was a startling and solemn 
revelation. It was difficult, says Plato, to attain, and dangerous to pub- 
lish the knowledge of the true God. Every Initiate in the Egyptian and 
Babylonian Mysteries were students deeply interested in the things seen, 
and the lessons learned, during their initiation, and they not only asked 
questions, but verified the statements made by the Hierophants, through 
their own personal investigations. In fact, they were endeavoring to ac- 



234 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

quire " Light '' and Wisdom, consequently they looked up to those who 
initiated them for guidance, when the}^ discovered that they must search 
and think for themselves, and in this way developed the power of 
Thought which could not otherwise have been done. " Knowledge is 
Power" but first let us understand what is meant b}' " Knowledge." 

Many people are under the impression that " Knowledge " is com- 
prised in simply knowing a thing to be hard or soft, hot or cold ; that the 
object is a stone, a horse, dog or boy, is to know all about it; but that kind 
of knowledge is very superficial. There are many others who fanc}' that 
the result of experience places them in possession of certain facts, truths, 
etc., which is perfect knowledge. Now, I claim that true knowledge is 
a conscious realization of the law of phenomenal life, etc., a thorough 
understanding, of the underl3dng causes of the manifestations and differ- 
entiations of all things, and to be enabled to trace Nature from cause to 
Effect. For instance : — to have a Knowledge of Man we must trace the 
Monadic essence through elements to minerals, from minerals to plants, 
from plants to animals, from animals to quarternary Man, up to the 
present evolution, then on through body, soul and spirit, into the Eternal 
Essence of all things ; this is knowledge, and such knowledge is only to 
be acquired by earnest study and the soul's deep meditation. Therefore, 
in our endeavor to solve any scientific problem, no matter how abstruse it 
may be, we should concentrate our mind firml}' and persistentl}' upon the 
subject, and then study it according to the law of analogy, or correspon- 
dence, which is the fundamental idea in all esoteric philosophies, whose 
right application is the ke}' note to esoteric study. 

Annie Besant, in the " Seven Principles of Man," page 14, states 
that, " The material centres of sensation are located in the Linga 
Sharira [Eiliereal Body) , which may be said to form the bridge between 
the physical organs and the mental perceptions ; impressions from the 
physical universe impinge on the material molecules of the phj-sical 
bod}^, setting in vibration the constituent cells of the organs of sensation, 
or our ' senses.' These vibrations in their turn, set in motion the finer 
material molecules of the corresponding organs in the Linga Sharira (the 
' Ka ' of the ancient Egyptians), or the centers of sensation, the inner 
senses. From these, vibrations are again propagated into the yet rarer 
matter of the lower mental plane, whence they are reflected back until, 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 235 

reaching the material molecules of the cerebral hemispheres, they become 
our ' brain consciousness.' 

" This correlated and unconscious succession is necessary for the 
normal action of ' consciousness,' as we know it. In sleep and in trance, 
natural or induced, the first and last stages are generally omitted, and 
the impressions start from and return to the astral plane, and thus make 
no trace on the brain raemor}^ ; but the natural psychic, the clairvoyant 
who does not need trance for the exercise of his power, is able to transfer 
his consciousness from the physicial to the astral plane without losing 
his grip thereof and can impress the brain-memory with knowledge 
gained on the astral plane, so retaining it for use." 

I consider consciousness to be the Sixth sense. It deals with the 
occult, the psychic, the purely mental, and is but little understood by 
the people of the Western world, simpl}^ because there is no money in 
it. Yet, b}' the use of this sense, we can work apparent miracles by the 
thoughts of others, like an open book. Consciousness develops intuition 
to such an extent, or degree, that to one who has cultivated this sense, 
by simply holding the hand of a person he can fee/ him talk, just as 
plainly and as intelligently as if you saw his lips move in speech and 
heard his voice. Now if we understand that Thoughts are things, that 
Thoughts are personal entities, just as much as a book or pen, a man or 
a tree we can thoroughl}' comprehend this fact. A word lightly spoken 
may not live, but the thought that embodied it does. Consequently 
to the ps3^chic, the clairvoyant, there is no difficulty in reading one's 
mind, for the simple reason that the Thought forms are seen and easily 
understood, because he not onl}' sees the Thought, but as I have already 
stated, he can feci him express himself. 

Albert Pike says, in " Morals and Dogmas," page 573 : "The words 
I speak are but a succession of particular sounds, that by conventional 
arrangement communicate to others the Immaterial, Intangible, Eternal 
Thought. The fact that Thought continues to exist an instant, 
after it makes its appearance in the soul, proves it immortal : for 
there is nothing conceivable that can destroy it. The spoken words, 
being mere sounds, may vanish into thin air, and the written ones mere 
marks, be burned, erased, destroyed : but the Thought itself lives still, 
and must live on forever. A human Thought, then, is an actual exist- 



236 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

ence, and a Force and Power, capable of acting upon and controlling 
matter as well as mind. Is not the existence of a God, who is the 
immaterial soul of the Universe, and whose Thought, embodied or not 
embodied in his Word, an Infinite Power of creation and production, 
destruction and preservation, quite as comprehensible as the existence 
of a Soul, of a Thought separated from the Soul, of the power of that 
Thought to mould the fate and influence the Destinies of Humanity? " 

How sublimely grand is nature in her wondrous majesty and 
beauty, and how few there are who try to solve her mysteries. Science 
informs us of the harmony of nature's laws, which guide the glorious 
spheres in their orbits, and tries to explain the peculiar differentiation of 
molecular forms continually manifesting themselves from the unseen 
world around us ; yet who is there among us that understands the 
mystery of either motion, sound or color? We tramp the stones, dust 
and grasses beneath our feet, seldom giving a thought about their 
peculiar differentiation and wonderful manifestations into higher forms 
of spiritual unfoldment, demonstrating what the poet says : 

"Every clod feels a stir of night, 

An instinct within it that reaches and towers, 
Grasping blindly above it for light, 

It climbs to a soul in the grasses and flowers. 

Bvery object of which we know, every phenomenon we come across, 
has a soul in it. It is the moving power that produced the motion, the 
effect of which on us, we call an object. For all objects of which we have 
knowledge are objects of vibratory movement on us. This moving 
power may be, and is, in materialistic language called force. Now this 
force, or soul, is evolved and differentiated as it clothes itself in forms, 
a process which may be called the incarnation of force. This is a 
universal law. Kverywhere we notice that force, type or idea is incar- 
nated, or manifests itself in forms, again and again, and thus it, grows. 
Force is never destroyed, but when the form, in which it clothes itself 
for the time being, is broken up, it finds some other form in which to 
express itself The same law applies to the human kingdom ; for 
human beings are just as much a part of nature as anything else. 
Human force, or type, or soul also reincarnates in order to grow-. The 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 237 

only difference between the process, as working in the lower kingdom 
and that noticed in humanity, is that while in the lower kingdoms the 
force is a special one, human forces or souls are individuals. Each soul 
is an individual, and capable of no further subdivision and differentiation, 
but only of progress. Thus the soul in man, as an individual force, 
appears first in the crudest form. Then as it repeats its incarnation, or 
manifestation in form, it goes on progressing till it has completed the 
human evolution, and has reached the same perfection, as, for instance, 
was reached by Christ. Thus re-incarnation is the method of the evolu- 
tion of the soul, and we must distinctly understand, that it does not 
mean transmigration, or reappearance of individuals of one incarnation, 
as the very same individual in the next. 

The stone disentegrates and forms the dust of the earth, so that plant 
life might come into existence, and produce higher forms of unfoldment, 
leading on to higher spiritual development and divine consciousness, as 
manifested in her higher forms, for as the Reverend J. W. Lee, D.D., 
says, in the " Making of Man : " 

'• Not till the dust stands erect in the living man ; not till the atoms 
throb in a human brain, and beat in a human heart was the intention 
under the drift of ages, spelled out in the unity of thought. Man is the 
head and heart of nature. Evolution and Involution is the coming and 
becoming of man. The world is because he is." 

What mind can comprehend the Infinite and absolutely unknown, 
having no beginning and shall have no end ; which is both last and 
first, because whether differentiated or withdrawn into itself it ever is ? 
What mind can explain the mystery and power of " magnetism," the 
virtue or force which compels one pole of a magnetic needle to point direct 
to the north? And what is Light? What is electricity? Who can 
explain the process by which the rose received its delicious perfume ? 
Whence comes the blush of its petals ? And how does the lily come forth 
from the slime and filth of the cesspool, in all its dazzling brightness and 
purity? Is it any more a problem, whence comes Thought, Will, Percep- 
tion and all the phenomena of the mind ? Has the phonograph vocal 
organs ? Has it a memory ? Has this rotating cjdinder which speaks to 
us a brain and tongue, that will articulate with an exactitude seemingly 
imcomprehensible — your vocal Thought ? 



238 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

How often we hear people say that " the brain is the organ of the 
mind and its secretion is Thought!" Are we to understand from this 
that Thought or Mind cannot exist without the Brain f If that is the 
idea they desire to convey, I for my part most emphatically object to such 
conception, and do most earnestly ask the reader to follow me in an 
argument along these lines, so that I may be enabled to show them that 
these assertions are not true. Does it require a brain to direct ? 

" Aldebaraii, fairest in Germini's train, 

That beams forth with Capella on high ; 
Where Orion's bright clusters splendidly reign, 
And illumines the beautiful skj'." 

When Professor Tyndall delivered his celebrated address in Belfast, 
Ireland, upon the subject of " Matter and Mind," he stated " that Science 
would probably have entirelj^ to recast its conception of matter," and this 
is just exactly what Science has been compelled to do; and to-day, in 
this wonderful twentieth century, it does not give the same definition to 
matter it did when I was a boy, for now, we recognize matter existing 
under conditions that would have been regarded as an absurdity by the 
Scientific world, when Tyndall intimated the necessity for the reconsider- 
ation of preconceived ideas regarding matter. 

Now this brings me to my first remark about " the brain being the 
organ of the Mind," etc. Nearly every person is under the impression 
that Thought is produced by the action of the " gray matter of the 
brain," and when the gray matter was not to be found working, in its 
peculiar convolutions, thought was not able to produce itself, and that 
with the presence of the brain thought is manifested. According to the 
old theory the development of thought in a child was entirely different in 
its character from that in man, or even in the child at a more advanced 
age. It was claimed that the thottght in the child was infantile in- its 
character, and as the child grew from boyhood to manhood, thought grew 
pari passu and became far more subtle and powerful, and that it was a 
more mature Thought, having developed through an advanced age, being 
produced simply by the physical development of the convolutions of the 
cerebral hemispheres. 

Further, if at any period of man's life his brain was injured, or over- 
powered by ttse of strong liquors or narcotics, or under high feverish 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 239 

conditions, the blood supply would be impure and bad blood would 
function through the brain, in consequence of which he would have 
delirium, and his thoughts become confused through the peculiar condi- 
tion of the brain. 

Again, it is asserted that if a man's brain is injured by a heavy blow 
upon the head, crushing the bone in upon the gray matter, thought is 
^immediately arrested, and in lifting the pressure of the bone from the 
brain thought will begin to function again. It is claimed that if a 
portion of the brain were destroyed or eaten away through disease, the 
faculty of thought expressed by that particular portion of the brain would 
disappear. 

The conclusion arrived at would be, from the above, that thought 
grows, ripens and matures with the growth and development of the brain, 
and varies according to the condition of the brain, being destroyed if 
the brain is seriously injured, finally disappearing as the brain decays 
and the mind of man is destroyed — is lost. Now there is no question 
about the strength of these arguments, for they are most assuredly very 
strong, more especially to one who reasons, step by step, along the lines 
where this process of reasoning would lead him. 

But I intend to show that this inductive method of reasoning is not 
at all times true, for many facts have been overlooked, and in consequence 
the entire argument falls to the ground, like a house built with a pack of 
cards. Annie Besant has said : " Unless you are sure that you know 
everything in the universe of discourse, inductive logic does not lead 
you to a certain and final conclusion," which most assuredly has not been 
done in this argument ; therefore the whole superstructure falls to pieces. 

In an argument based on the constant relation between two things, 
a relationship must positively be shown to exist. If you get the 
same two things moving in an opposite direction, varying inversely, 
then what becomes of the argument ? Now that is exactly what has 
happened in connection with the argument based on brain and thought, 
and their constantly varying together. It has been found they do not 
so vary, and still more than that, sometimes vary inversely ; that is, a 
condition may sometimes arise where the brain is partially paralyzed, 
but where the thought is much more active than when it is working in 
the brain. 



240 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Now I :un i^oiiiu^ to ])rovo to you by hy])notic and nicsnicric experi- 
iiK'iil lli.it iiiU'lli,i;riu'c c;iii function when the brain is paralyzed. 
Chaicol and his school haAc demonstrated tliis fact, and they have proved 
it oNcr- and over again. Tlic learned doctors have not advanced a tlieory, 
hill have just stated facts in their research and scientific observation. Hut 
lirsl IcI iiK- (|iiotc you from the "Medical Record" of New York, page 
io.|, |iil\' lOlli, iSc)8: "A man is rejiorled hy Porta to have lost the 
whole of his right cerel>i;il hi'iiiis])lR're by an accicUut. lie was uncon- 
scious for a {v\\ hours only, and icf/fi/ he rcan'crcd I/r /yoTtu/ llml iiiDiir- 
th(il('lv (t//iT llic luriihiit he li(i({ iii>t hrni iiiiconsrions^ because he recollected 
being picked up and taken to a hospital, ivighteen nuniths later the 
wound was closed. 1 \v had, of c(nirse, side paralysis ; but liis left cerebral 
hemisphere being intact his intellectual functions are said to be unim- 
paired." 

VVc have ;ni iuslniuieut called the spvnioorafili, which distinctly 
shows, not oul\- the tlirobbiug of the heart, but it will record and show 
the iiio\ciiieut of the lungs, as well as the coutracliou and expansion of 
the muscles. it is an instrument with a revoh'iug cylinder and various 
atlat'hiuciils, such as levers, ])cucil, paper, etc., and when couuected with 
various parts of the liiimau boiK' in a certain way we are eiud)led to 
register the peculiar motions of the various organs, such as the beating 
of the heart, the risi' and tall of the lungs, etc., etc. Now, by ajiplying 
certain parts of one of these niachiues to yviwx heart, you would get 
a recoi-d of its motion, showing the slightest differentiation of its action, 
ami this record would be (raced by (he reccuder in all its variations upon 
the cylinder ol the inslniuu'iil ilsell. It \\\\\ also recoixl with exactness 
the motions of the lungs and muscles, however slight. If no perceptible 
motion is cogui/cd by mir jihysical senses, this iustrumeul will mark it 
onl in curved lines, easily recognizable by any physician, and these very 
lines prove the truth and fact of the motion, thus doing away with human 
testimony and the possibilit\' of tiaud b^■ any hnuian intervcntioij. 

Now we will hypnotize a man, and with this iuslrument find that the 
motions ol his various organs, while in ihc hypnotic state, are so slight 
that without its use we sluuild declare they were iiot functioning at all. 
This delicate instrument, with its wonderful nicclianisni, records the 
slightest niovcnient in the lungs and heart, etc., thciel)\- proving to us 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 241 

that the blood does not function through all jxirts of the brain, neither 
does it go to the lungs to be oxygenized and electrified and forced through 
the arterial system in all its wonderful ramifications on its life-giving 
mission to all parts of the body. Consequently the blood becomes over- 
charged with carbonic acid, which is produced through improper respira- 
tion, and its presence brings on a state of coma, a condition of the brain 
in which thought is nnable to function. So far as the physical Ijody of 
this man is concerned, as he is to all appearances dead, lying there .so 
still and quiet, with all the attributes of death, yet, although in this con- 
dition, we shall find all his mental faculties in a remarkable state of 
activity. 

We can obtain from him, in his present condition, a demonstration 
of memory and consciousness far more powerful than in his regular nor- 
mal or waking state. His memory has been immensely stimnlated, in 
fact to such an extent that he can tell us of every incident in his life, 
from childhood up to the present day. He will be enabled to describe 
scenes of his schoolboy days, the school and schoolmates, the master, 
the interior and exterior of the building, and he will remember the houses 
and the people who lived in the immediate vicinity, indeed many things 
which in his waking state had long been forgotten, will now be described 
by him, as if they had occurred but yesterday. We shall al.so find that 
in his present state or condition his mental faculties have been so inten- 
sified, he can memorize to an extent trul}' remarkable, so much so that if 
we should read to him a half dozen stanzas from " Homer's Odys.sey " 
in Greek, a language he does not understand, yet will he repeat it, word 
for word, from beginning to end without a mistake. If we restore him 
to his waking state we shall discover that he will not remember or be able 
to pronounce one word of it. Hypnotize him again and we shall find 
that he is able to repeat them, word for word, without blunder or mishap, 
thus demonstrating that when his brain is dormant, not functioning, and 
the man is in the hypnotic condition, we find a higher grade of intelli- 
gence and a grander memory, with no blank in his life, as he can describe 
accurately every incident, with an exactitude seemingly incomprehensible. 

Many men which we meet in every-day life are dowered with an 
ordinary intelligence. Take one of these and throw him into a hyp- 
notic condition, when he will be far more brilliant in his reasoning, and 

U 



242 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

often argue from cause to effect witli surprising ability, yet his brain is 
not working, and in this condition you can compel him to do nearly any- 
thing you may desire. You can destroy his senses or intensify them. 
You will realize that j^ou can control his voluntar}' muscles, individuality, 
sympathies and antipathies, and perform many things with which, no 
doubt, you are perfectly familiar. We positively know that we can hyp- 
notize an insane man and obtain from him intelligence and reasoning 
powers. Throw him back again to his waking state and once more he is 
a lunatic; but under hypnotic control he becomes an intelligent, reasoning, 
human being, who will talk and argue as well as one that is sane. I 
could continue my arguments along these lines, but think the above will 
prove that though thought may always be expressed by the brain^ it is also 
possible to express it withoitt the brain. Although many incidents in our 
normal lives have been forgotten, they are to be fovind impressed upon 
our consciousness and can be brought back, again and again, even when 
lost to our normal faculties. 

We find, through these investigations, that instead of thought varying 
with the state of the brain, it varies against it ; when the brain is in a 
state of coma, thought is far more active ; when paralyzed the mental 
faculties are immensely stimulated and the man enabled to exercise a 
power far more keen and subtle than during his waking consciousness, 
by which fact we "^.x^ forced to admit that the brain is a limitation impressed 
on our consciousness .1 a partial instrtinient instead of the producer of Thought. 
Therefore the Brain is not the organ of the Mind, and it does not secrete 
Thought in the same manner in which the Hepatic gland secretes bile for 
the digestive apparatus. For, as above stated. Thoughts are Things, and 
the Thoughts which come to Man have existed long ages before the 
physical body of the man was born. 

We can readily prove the Power and Force of Thought ; for instance ; 
You are sitting at your window, or standing at some place where you 
can see another person — say — standing upon the sidewalk, waiting for 
some one, and, if you send out a thought to him, willing him to look 
around at you, the first thing you will observe will be a peculiar feeling 
of uneasiness about the individual, and he will turn his head, one way 
then the other, until finally he will direct his gaze to the spot where you 
are standing. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 243 

In the Appendix of Paracelsus, by Hartman, he states that : " By the 
magic power of the will a person on this side of the ocean may make a 
person on the otHer side hear what is said on this side, and a person in the 
East may thus converse with another in the West. The physical may 
hear and understand the voice of another man at a distance of a hundred 
steps, and the ethereal body of a man may hear what another man thinks 
at a distance of a hundred miles and more. What may be accomplished 
by ordinary means in a month (such as the sending of messages) may be 
done by this art in a day." 

The thought goes forth with a force for good or evil, just as we think 
or send it out, and like a stone cast forth from our hand, falling into a 
pool of water, disturbs and displaces every molecule of that body. If we 
watch the falling stone we shall see, where it struck the water, an all 
embracing circular wave start out with a momentum which will eventually 
reach the surrounding banks, when, in order to preserve its equilibrium, it 
will return to the source from whence it emanated, thus proving that 
(Thoughts) " curses, like chickens, come home to roost." So we should 
ever be guarded in our Thoughts, for those we send out return to us, and 
we ourselves feel their influence, either for Good or Evil, as the case may 
be. Thoughts are perfect entities. 

Thought has no language I But in passing through the cerebral hemi- 
spheres of a Greek, Arab, Hindu, Chinese, or an American, it expresses 
itself in the language of the brain through which it passes. We can 
clearly demonstrate the locality of the brain, but who among us can locate 
the Mind? " Mind (or Manas) belongs to the immortal man, the real / 
that continually clothes itself in various personalities, to live, die and pass 
away with each and every one of them. But the true man lives through 
all and endures forever," and the voice of the real man comes to us by a 
process as direct and swift as bodily vision, a voice which never deceives 
us Itituition. 

Annie Besant says, in "Reincarnation," page 22: "The brain no 
more produces the thought than the organ produces the melody, in both 
cases there is a player working through the instrument. But the power 
of the player to manifest himself, in thought or in melody, is limited 
by the capacities of the instrument." 



■■^•i 



J3grainitrs-^p|)iit\— €^Dm)bs. 



My form stupendous here the gods have placed. 
Sparing each spot of harvest-bearing land; 

Hnd with this mighty work of art have graced 
H rochj? isle, encompassed once with sand; 
Hnd near the Pyramids have bid me stand: 

Not that fierce sphynx that Chebes erewhile laid waste. 
But great Latona's servant, mild and bland; 

hatching the prince beloved, who fills the throne 

Of egypt's plains, and calls the Nile his own. 
XThat heavenly monarch, who his foes defies 
Like "Vulcan powerful, and like IPallas wise. 

— Akrian. 



246 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 247 



W^ii 



CHAPTER XI. 

PYRAMIDS-SPHINX— TOMBS. 

HEN first I visited the Pyramids of Egypt it was a far more 
ifficult task than to-day, as then we had to cross the river Nile 
in row boats, and on arriving upon the west bank, hire donkeys and ride 
through the fields to the Pyramids and Sphinx, pestered at every step by 
the fellaheen, boys and girls, running along beside us, begging and 
shouting loudly for baksheesh ; but now there is a ver}^ nice route that 
will take you direct to the Pyramids, lying along a very fine macada- 
mized road, shaded with beautiful accacia or lebek trees leading directly 
to the foot of the Great Pyramid. You may take your choice of either 
a carriage or a donkey with which to make the trip from Cairo to 
the monuments and back. Should you choose the former, the charges 
will be about five dollars, and will take about one hour and a half to go 
and the same time to return. If you should start from the city with a 
carriage in the early morning, you would be enabled to devote the middle 
of the day to an examination of the Pyramids, Sphinx and other objects 
of interest in the immediate vicinity and return to Cairo in time for 
dinner in the evening ; but, of course, your time would be very limited. 
Should you decide on a donkey for the trip, the expense would be about a 
dollar and a half a day and the difference in time will be fully half an hour 
longer going and coming, than it would be travelling with a carriage. 
There are a great many people constantly visiting these stupendous 
specimens of ancient Egyptian Architecture and sculpture, who, after 
devoting a couple of hours to the examination of the celebrated Pyra- 
mids, come away with the impression that they know all about them. No 
greater mistake than this could be made, as it would be utterly impossible 
for any one, in so short a time, to realize the wonderful proportions and 
stupendous magnitude of the stones with which they are built, until 
they have thoroughly examined them in all their parts ; both the exterior 



248 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

and interior of their geometrical proportions and astronomical position, 
then, and then only, can they say "/ know the Pyramids.'''' In order to 
reach these celebrated fabrics, we cross the river from Cairo by the Kasr- 
el-Nil bridge, which will lead ns on to the very fine road referred to 
above, constructed by his Highness, the Khedive, for the express purpose 
of accomodating the immense throngs continually visiting these cele- 
brated Pyramids, Sphinx, etc., in the plains of Gizeh. 

These wonderful monuments, which I am about to describe, occupy a 
site about eight or nine miles from the city of Cairo. After crossing the 
river Nile over the large iron bridge, we continue on and cross its western 
branch b}' a much smaller one, and then turning to the left enter the 
beautiful avenue shaded with accacias which leads us to the plains of 
Gizeh, and to these immense relics of ancient Egyptian Architecture. 
The view, as we ride along, is simply magnificent, the green fields of 
waving corn, clover, etc.. presenting quite a contrast to the barren hills 
and desert sands which bound our horizon, while the pyramids them- 
selves appear like huge mountains, rising into the clear blue sky above. 
It is not until we stand beneath their very shadow, looking upward along 
the gigantic steps leading to the apex, or summit, that we are enabled to 
full}^ realize 'their stupendous magnitude. Then their clear, sharply 
defined outlines disappear and their immense proportions break in upon 
our senses, filling vis with awe, admiration and amazement, for these 
wonderful monuments of a prehistoric age, now lying before us in all 
their rugged sublimity and grandeur. Even here the eye can hardly 
embrace them, nor the mind fully comprehend their gigantic proportions, 
and we stand bewildered, as it were, before one of the " Wonders of the 
World." An immense number of stones have been used in building the 
Great Pyramid weighing over thirty tons, each of which contain hun- 
dreds of cubic feet. In our ascent up its rough and rugged sides we 
could form no idea of the time, power, or force used, to quarry, carry 
across the desert sands, and place in position, such enormous blocks of 
stone, nor the machinery or number of men required in its construction. 

The Pyramids of Gizeh occupy a rocky plateau considerably 
higher than the flooding waters of the river Nile, and the}' are built with 
their sides facing the four cardinal points of the universe. TJie first or 
Great Pyramid is known as Khufu or Cheops. TJic second Khafra and 




UJ 
CD 
Q 

CD 



4 S 

cn 
< 

Ld 
X 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 249 

The thii'd is called the Pyramid of Men-kau-Ra. Some Greek writers 
claimed that this pyramid was built for a tomb, wherein was placed the 
celebrated courtezan Rhedopis^ being built for her, while others state that 
it was erected for Nitokris\ but the discover}', by Col. H. Vyse, of a 
wooden mummy case bearing upon it the cartouce of King Men-kau-Ra, 
proves that he was the founder of this monument, and that it was erected 
for him. There is a story connected with this pyramid, which very much 
resembles our modern tale of Cinderella, for Strabo tells us that : " While 
Rhodopis was bathing, an eagle carried off one of her shoes, carried it to 
Memphis, and dropped it into the lap of the King, who was then sitting 
on the judgment seat. The king, admiring the neatness of the shoe, 
and surprised at the strangeness of the occurrence, sent out messengers 
to search for the owner of the shoe. She was fouud at Naucratis and 
brought to the king, who made her his wife and on her death erected the 
third pyramid to her memory." There are several smaller pyramids and 
a great many tombs and mummy pits of great interest, quite close to the 
greater pyramids and Sphinx and the Granite Teviple^ discovered by 
Mariette Bey in 1853. Campbell's Tomb was discovered by Col. H. 
Vyse, in 1837, during his exploring excavations, and he named it after 
the British Consul-General who filled that office at the time. Here we 
find numberless tombs and an immense quantity of buried tombs and 
mastabas of the early empire scattered promiscuously around, demon- 
strating that we are wandering through an ancient city of the dead. 
The great Pyramids stand about five miles from the river Nile, and the}' 
are just as much a problem to the human race to-da}' as they were in the 
days of Herodotus, who visited these celebrated monuments of the 
ancient Eg3'ptians, and informs us that according to his judgment, the 
labor required to prepare for the construction of these wonderful fabrics 
was not less than that required to build the pyramids themselves. 

The largest of the group (Cheops) is seven hundred and sixty-four 
feet at the base and covers thirteen acres of ground. It has a perpen- 
dicular height of four hundred and fifty feet, with about two hundred 
and six steps, varying from five feet to eighteen inches, which will bring 
you to its summit, a flat surface of about forty feet square, from which 
point a very fine view of the surrounding country may be obtained. 
Various writers give different dates for the founding of this wonder of the 



250 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

world, C/ieops, and Wilkinson places its origin B. c. 2123. The best place 
to make the ascent is near the northeast angle, as there the stones are 
in a better condition for climbing, as on the other faces the stones have 
been broken and displaced, no doubt by the Caliphs, when they tried 
to destroy them. The steps are about two feet wide, and are all right 
for making the ascent ; but coming down one does not seem to have 
sufficient foot room ; but there is really no danger, if you trust yourself 
to the attendants, who are quite strong and very careful of those under 
their care. 

It was quite a long time before an entrance to the pyramid was 
discovered, and it was not until the Caliphs had finally established 
themselves at. Cairo that the entrance was actually known. The Caliphs 
undertook to force a passage, by quarrying towards the centre, through 
the solid masonry, when, after reaching a distance of about one hundred 
feet, the workmen heard a noise like the sound of falling stones, which 
demonstrated an approach to some chamber or passage, and on con- 
tinuing their work in the direction of the sounds, about fifteen feet to 
the left, they came across the original passage, made by the craftsmen, 
leading to the two interior chambers. They then returned b}^ this 
discovered passage, clearing away the stones, etc., which had fallen into 
it during their tunneling. They traversed this passage until the 
original entrance was found, which formed a pointed arch or pediment 
on the North side of the pyramid, a little to one side of its centre, 
and about forty-five feet from the ground. This entrance is three 
feet eleven inches high, by three feet five inches wide, while the 
passage-way to the interior descends at an angle of 26° 41' for a dis- 
tance of three hundred and forty feet, in a perfectly straight line, 
where it falls upon a horizontal passage of smaller dimensions, about 
thirty feet in length, terminating in a sepulchral chamber nearly a 
hundred feet below the base of the pyramid, which is forty feet long 
by twenty-seven wide and a little over eleven feet in height, ^ though 
never completed, being left in the rough. From the southern side there 
is a very narrow passage extending fully fift}^ feet farther on, where it 
dies in the solid rock beyond. Col. H. Vyse, in his exploration of this 
chamber, sunk a shaft beneath it to a considerable depth, in the hopes of 
making some new discoveries, but was disappointed in his expectations. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 251 

At a distance of sixty-three feet from the entrance, down the 
incline already described, we find a very large block of granite, which 
closed the entrance leading to the chamber above. The exploring work- 
men were unable to remove this stone, so they quarried around it to the 
right (which road we took), and passing over some very rough steps we 
continued along the inclined passage that is blocked, until we arrived at 
what is known as the Gi'cat Gallery^ a distance of about one hundred and 
thirty feet, at an angle of 26° 18' at this point, when a horizontal passage 
leads us to the " Queen's Chamber," but just before we enter it we have 
to descend one step. 

This chamber is eighteen feet long, sixteen feet wide and twenty 
feet high in the centre, having a pediment roof, the stones of which 
are carried quite a distance into the solid masonry, in order to 
strengthen the roof. We noticed that the stones forming the sides 
of this chamber fitted so closel}' that it was difficult to discover their 
joints. This apartment is located directly under the centre of the 
apex of the p3-ramid and distant from it three hundred and seventy-three 
feet, or four hundred and seventy from the original summit, before it had 
been disturbed by the vandal hands of the Caliphs. On each side of this 
chamber are small holes, for ventilating purposes, and on the East side 
near the entrance is a recess formed by projecting stones, one above the 
other, the object of which has never been understood. Nothing was ever 
found in this apartment, and if anything had been concealed here, so far 
it has not been discovered. 

Now let us return to the junction of the Great Gallery and the 
horizontal passage, where we shall find a well or inclined shaft two feet 
four inches square, and one hundred and ninet3'-one feet in depth, reach- 
ing down to the inclined passage, not far from the sepulchral chamber 
already described. It was, no doubt, used as a means ,of communication 
between the upper chambers and the sepulchral chamber after the pas- 
sage had been closed by the block of granite previously described. 

One can readily pass through it by means of the projections, which 
no doubt were made for this purpose. Right here w^here the horizontal 
passage leads to the Queen's Chamber is the Great Gallery^ one hundred 
and fifty feet six inches long, twenty-eight feet high and seven feet wide 
above the vamp or seat, which extends along both sides of the gallery, 



252 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

being two feet high and projecting from the face of the sides nineteen 
inches, thus leaving a passage three feet ten inches in the clear. Over- 
head the projecting stones give this gallery the appearance of being 
arched, on account of the eight courses of stone laid in the side walls, 
approaching each other in every course. At the end of the Great 
Gallery we step or crawl upon a narrow horizontal passage way, twenty- 
two feet long, by three feet eight inches high at the beginning, but 
widening before reaching the end into a vestibule or ante-chamber to the 
principal apartment of this pyramid, the King's Chamber^ the dimensions 
of which are thirtj^-four feet long from East to West, with sides from 
North to South seventeen feet wide, and its height is nineteen feet. 

It is not situated exactly under the apex, but a little to the south- 
eastward of it. The roof is flat and ceiled with immense granite slabs 
two feet wide and eighteen feet six inches long, whose ends are supported 
by the lateral walls. Within this chamber to-day, mutilated and una- 
dorned, lies the lidless and empty sarcophagus, without name or carving. 
It is made of beautiful red granite, like the blocks which form the sides 
of the chamber itself, the joints demonstrating the knowledge and skill 
of the craftsmen, as they are fitted together so closely and with such 
perfect exactness that to insert the blade of a penknife between them 
would be impossible. What an immense amount of time and labor must 
the polishing of the stones which form the chamber and passages have 
entailed ! 

In the side walls of this chamber are tubular holes about three feet 
from the floor, which, when traced to their outlet, prove to be purely 
for ventilation. There are four or five rooms, or entresols, above the 
King's Chamber ; but these are of very much smaller dimensions, being 
evidently made for the purpose of lessening the tremendous pressure 
from above upon its flat roof, thus testifying to the knowledge of archi- 
tecture by the practical operative craftsmen of those days, and proving 
beyond the shadow of a doubt, as I have before stated, that they had a 
far greater knowledge of the mechanical arts and sciences than we 
possess to-day. 

Before leaving the pyramids I desire to tell you of a rather amusing 
incident related in the autobiography of Sir W. Siemens. One day, with 
some companions, he was standing upon the summit of the Great Pyra- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 253 

mid {Cheops) when " an Arab called his attention to the fact, that when 
he raised his hand, with fingers outspread, an acute singing note was 
heard, the sound ceasing as soon as he let his hand fall " " I found his 
assertion," he writes, '' to be true. As soon as I raised one of my fin- 
gers above ray head I felt a prickling in the fingers. That this could 
only be caused by an electrical phenomenon was proved by the slight 
electric shock, felt on trying to drink out of a wine bottle. So I wrapped 
a full bottle of wine that I had with me in damp paper, and thus con- 
verting it into a Leyden-bottle which was soon strongly charged with 
electricity by the simple device of holding it above my head. The Arabs 
had already become distrustful, on seeing small lightnings, as it w^ere, 
issue from the wine bottles held up by myself and companions, and who 
now held a brief consultation. Suddenly at a given signal each of my 
companions were seized by the guide who had led him up, and now tried 
to force him to go down again. I myself was standing at the very top 
of the pyramid when the sheik of the Arabs came to me and told me, 
through my interpreter, that the Arabs had determined that we were at 
once to leave the pyramid, because we were practicing magic and it might 
damage their chance of making a living. On my refusing to obey this 
order, the sheik caught hold of my left hand. I had awaited this move- 
ment and held up m}- right hand with the bottle, in the attitude of a 
magician, afterwards lowering it slo\vl\' towards the point of the Sheik's 
nose. When quite close to that feature, I felt a violent shock run through 
the bottle to m}' own arm and was certain that the sheik must have re- 
ceived the equivalent. At any rate he fell senseless on the stones and a 
few anxious moments passed before he rose suddenl}- with a loud cry and 
sprang down the gigantic steps of the p3'ramid, with long strides. The 
Arabs, seeing this, and excited by the sheiks constant cries of magic ! 
magic ! released my companions and followed their leader, leaving us 
complete masters of the pyramids." 

About six hundred 3'ards to the southeast of the Great Pyramid^ 
crouches the Sphinx, vainly endeavoring to arise from out the drifting 
sands of the desert, one of the most remarkable objects to be seen in the 
vicinity of the Pyramids. The age of this monolithic carving is un- 
known, as very little of the history of this fabulous monster has been 
handed down to us, for the simple reason that none of the ancient Greek 



254 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

authors funiisli any account of it, and the Romans but very little and 
that unreliable. It is a positive fact that many people may now be found 
who actually believe that the Pyramids could not have been in existence 
when Moses led the Israelites from out the " Land of Egypt," and out 
of the " House of Bondage," simply because the Bible gives no account 
of them. It is the same with the history of the Sphinx, because no 
mention is made by ancient writers regarding this extraordinary monster 
it can have no claim to antiquity, and according to Roman historians, 
is simply of modern origin compared to the tombs and temples which sur- 
round it. In fact, Pliny tells us that, during his time, the Romans believed 
it to be the tomb of Amasis, one of the last kings of the XXVI Dynasty. 
Not many years ago, according to the investigations of some of our 
Egyptologists, it was believed to have been created by some one of the 
Kings of the Middle Empire. But it was not until the Stele was discov- 
ered by Mariette Bey, bearing upon its stony face a record of certain re- 
pairs made within the temple of the Sphinx by Thothmes IV, B. c. 1533, 
that its creation was positively known as due to one of the Kings of the 
Ancient Empire. 

The record upon the Stele is as follows : " The living Horns, the 
King of Upper and Lower Egj^pt, Khufu, during his lifetime, had cleaned 
out the Temple of Isis, ruler of the Pyramid, which is situated at the 
spot where is the Sphinx, on the north-east side of the Temple of Osiris, 
Lord of Rostau. He had build his P3'ramid where the Temple of this 
goddess is." There is a great deal more upon this stone that Mariette dis- 
covered, as well as other discoveries made b}^ him, going to prove that the 
Sphinx must have existed during the reign of Khufu, or Cheops. 
Mariette says that : " Around this imposing relic of antiquity, whose 
origin is wrapped in mysterj', a number of legends and superstitions have 
clustered in all ages ; but Egyptology has shown, Jirsf, that it was a 
colossal image of Ra-Harmachis, and therefore of his human representa- 
tive on earth, the King of Egypt, who had it hewn, and second^ that it was 
in existence in the time of, and was probably repaired b}^, Cheops or 
Chephren, who had lived about b. c. 3700." Thothmes IV. placed a stone 
tablet fully fourteen feet high between the paws of this monolithic 
monster, whereon was inscribed an account of a vision he had seen during 
an after-dinner nap. There is also an account of the works and repairs 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 255 

done by him at the cities of Heliopolis and Memphis, etc. The Sphinx 
is carved out of solid rock, and where the rock was too small or hollow 
to follow the lines of the body, these places were filled with sandstone. 
The length of this monster is one hundred and forty feet ; its extreme 
height, from the crown of the head to the pavement below, between its 
paws is nearly seventy feet ; its extended paws are fifty feet ; from the 
point of the chin to the top of the head is very nearly thirty feet ; the 
width of the face is fourteen feet, and the mouth is seven feet long. It 
has been frightfully mutilated ; but, notwithstanding this fact, one can, 
when standing in a proper position, still see a calm, peaceful expression 
upon its face, looking to the East, as it did when the rocky plateau 
above it reverberated with the sounds made by the craftsman who built 
the Pyramids in the ancient days of Pharaonic history. 

Kenrick, in his "Ancient Egypt," says. Vol. I, page 115: "The 
design of carving a rock which broke the view of the Pyramids into a 
gigantic Sphinx was worthy of the grandeur of Egyptian conceptions in 
Architecture and Sculpture. It was probably the work of the same age 
as the Pyramids themselves. A Sphinx is the representative of the 
monarch whose name it bears ; and as the name of Cliafre (Chephren) is 
found upon the tablet before mentioned, it is natural to suppose that it 
was fashioned in his honor. (An opinion in which I do not concur.) The 
Greek mytholog}' has accustomed us to speak of the Sphinx as a female, 
and the artists who carved, in the Roman times, those figures of Sphinxes 
from which antiquarians derived their first ideas of Egyptian antiquities, 
sometimes represented them as female. But in the genuine works of 
Pharaonic times, it is most rare to meet with a female Sphinx ; and in 
these exceptional cases a female sovereign is represented, as in the Sphinx 
of the Museum at Turin, published by Champollion, in his letter to the 
Duke de Blacas. The junction of the human head, with the body of a 
lion, denotes the combination of sagacity with strength required in the 
administration of a King." 

Before closing this article on the Sphinx I desire to quote you from 
Bacon's " Essays XXVIII," " Sphinx or Science," to demonstrate the 
grandeur of Symbolism, but more especially in the relation to the Sphinx. 
It demonstrates the necessity of a depth of profound thought and study, 
in order to obtain a knowledge of such a beautiful solution to this ancient 



256 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

symbol, lu our glorious Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Masonry- 
there are vast numbers of symbols, sublimely grand, which we shall be 
unable to realize or understand unless we devote time and most profound 
attention to a study of the beauties that lie imbedded wdthin them. Not 
until we commence to stud}^, in regular systematic order, the symbols in 
the various degrees of our most illustrious fraternity, from the 4° to the 
32° inclusive, shall we begin to realize the sublimity and grandeur con- 
tained within them, and comprehend the " Lost ivord^^^ understand the 
true meaning of The Building of the Temple^ solve The Mystery of the 
Balance and find the key to the Royal Secret, by which the veil will be 
reft asunder and all the glories of our beloved Fraternity opened to our 
view and understanding. 

Bacon says: "They relate that Sphinx was a monster, variously 
formed, having the face and voice of a virgin, the wings of a bird, and the 
talons of a griflSn. She resided on the top of a mountain, near the city of 
Thebes, and also beset the highways. Her manner was to lie in ambush 
and seize the travellers, and having them in her power to propose to them 
certain dark and perplexing riddles, which it was thought she received 
from the Muses, and if the wretched captives could not solve and inter- 
pret these riddles she, with great cruelty, fell upon them in their hesita- 
tion and tore them to pieces. This plague, having reigned a long time, 
the Thebans at length offered their kingdom to the man who could inter- 
pret her riddles, there being no other way to subdue her. ^dipus, a 
penetrating and prudent man, though lame in his feet, excited by so 
great a reward, accepted the conditions, and with a good assurance of 
mind, cheerfully presented himself before the monster, who directly asked 
him : ' What creature that was, which being born four-footed, afterward 
became two-footed, then three-footed, and lastly four-footed again ? ' 
^dipus, with presence of mind, replied : ' It was man, who, upon his 
first birth, and in infant state, crawled upon all fours in endeavoring to 
walk, but not long after went upright upon its two natural feet ; again, in 
old age walked three-footed with a stick ; and at last growing decrepit, lay 
four-footed confined to his bed ; ' and having by his exact solution 
obtained the victory, he slew the monster, and laying the carcass upon an 
Ass, led her away in triumph, and upon this he was, according to the 
agreement, made king of Thebes." 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 257 

Explanation. — This is an interesting, instructive fable, and seems 
invented to represent Science, especiall}^ as joined witli practice. For 
science may, without absurdit}', be called a monster, being strangely- 
gazed at and admired bj^ the ignorant and unskillful. Her figure and 
form is various, b}^ reason of the vast variety of subjects that science 
considers ; her voice and countenance are represented female, b}- reason 
of her gay appearance and volubility of speech ; wings are added because 
the sciences and their inventions run and fly about in a moment, for 
knowledge, like light, communicated from one torch to another, is pres- 
entl}' caught and copiously diffused ; sharp and hooked talons are 
elegantl3r attributed to her because the axioms and arguments of science 
enter the mind, lay hold of it, fix it down, and keep it from moving or 
slipping awa}'. 

This the sacred philosopher observed when he said, " The words 
of the wise are like goads, or nails driven far in," Eccles. 12 : 11. 
Again, all science seems placed on high, as it were on the tops of 
mountains that are hard to climb, for science is justly imagined a 
sublime and loft}' thing, looking down upon ignorance from an eminence, 
and at the same time taking an extensive view on all sides, as is usual on 
tops of mountains. 

Science is said to beset the highways, because through all the 
journey and peregrination of human life, there is matter and occasion 
offered for contemplation. Sphinx is said to propose various difficult 
questions and riddles to men which she received from the Muses, and 
these questions, as long as they originate with the Muses, may very 
well be unaccompanied with severity, for while there is no other end of 
contemplation and inqnir}^ but that of knowledge alone, the understand- 
ing is not oppressed, or driven to straits or difficulties, but expatiates and 
ranges at large, and even receives a degree of pleasure, form and variety ; 
but after the Muses have given over their riddles to Sphinx, that is to 
practice, which urges and impels to action, choice and determination, then 
it is that the}' become torturing, severe and trying, and unless solved and 
interpreted, strangely perplex and harass the human mind, rend it every 
way and perfectly tear it to pieces. All the riddles of Sphinx, therefore, 
have two conditions annexed, viz. : dilaceration to those who do not solve 
them, and empire to those who do. 
17 



258 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY 

For he who understands the things proposed, obtains his end, and 
every artificer rnles over his work — (meaning that knowledge and power 
are reciprocal ; so that to improve in knowledge is to improve in the 
power of commanding nature by introducing new arts and producing 
works and eflfects.) Sphinx has no more than two kinds of riddles, one 
relating to the nature of things, the other to the nature of man, and 
correspondent to these, the prizes of the solution are two kinds of empire : 
the empire over nature and the empire over man. For the true and 
ultimate end of natiiral philosoph}^ is dominion over natural things, 
natural bodies, remedies, machines and numberless other particulars, 
though the schools, contented with what spontaneously offers, and 
swollen with their own discourses, neglect, and in a manner despise, bothi 
things and works. But the riddle proposed to ^5^dipus, the solution 
whereof acquired him the Theban kingdom, regarded the nature of man ; 
for he who has thoroughly looked into and examined human nature, may 
in a manner command his own fortune, and seems born to acquire 
dominion and rule. It is with the utmost elegance added in the fable, 
that when Sphinx was conquered, her carcass was laid upon an ass ; for 
there is nothing so subtle and abstruse, but after being once made plain, 
intelligible and common, may be received by the slowest capacity-. We 
must not omit that the Sphinx was conquered bj'' a lame man, and 
impotent in his feet ; for men usuallj' make too much haste to the solu- 
tion of Sphinx's riddles ; whence it happens that she, prevailing, their 
minds are rather racked and torn b}' disputes than invested with com- 
mand, b}^ work and effects. 

The ancient city of Memphis was founded, according to Herodotiis, 
by Menes, the first known king of Eg3^pt. It has been called bj^ differ- 
ent names at various times or periods. Originally it was known as the 
" City of the White Wall." Later it was called Ha Ptah (house of Ptah), 
which the Greeks eventuall}' transformed into Hephaistopolis, and finally 
it received the name of Mcn-nefcr^ " the good place." In the course of 
time the letter ;• was dropped from Moi-ncfcr^ when the name of this 
celebrated city became known under the Coptic name of Menfi, or Memfi, 
which was soon changed to Memphis by the Greeks and Romans, 
from whom this name has been handed down to us of the twentieth 
century. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 259 

When Meues first formed the idea of establishing this city he 
realized that he would have to change the course of the river in order to 
obtain the amount of land necessary for the upbuilding of such an 
immense place as he had under contemplation. In order to accomplish 
his purpose he therefore built a large embankment across the river^ 
compelling it to flow off in another direction, and by this means reclaim- 
ing a vast amount of land upon which to lay the foundation of one of the 
most celebrated and wonderful cities of the world's history — Memphis, 
the capital of ancient Egypt. At the point where he commenced to turn 
the course of the river he caused an enormous dyke to be constructed, to 
protect the city and prevent the river from ever returning into its old 
course, and to ultimately destroy the city established with so much labor. 
There is one thing respecting Herodotus and Diodorus, the two historians 
who wrote so much about this country, which is that Herodotus gives us 
a very full description of the city of Memphis, the capital of Lower 
Egypt, and a very poor account of Thebes, not even alluding to the 
monuments of that wonderful city ; while Diodorus gives a full and com- 
plete account of the wonderful capital of Upper Egypt, Thebes, and tells 
but very little about Memphis, which does not even correspond with the 
account given by Herodotus. 

It was within the walls of this city that Menes erected the won- 
derful " Temple of Ptah," a Temple so vast and so grand, that its fame 
was known throughout the ancient world. It was the first and probably 
the largest and most magnificent temple ever constructed by the hand of 
Man, in this extrordinary valley of the river Nile, and doubtless involved 
an enormous amount of time, material and labor in its completion. No 
accurate descriptions have been preserved of this stupendous fabric ; but 
the best authorities agree that this wonderful Temple Avas begun by 
Menes, being enlarged and beautified by the various kings of succeeding 
dynasties, even up to the reign of Amasis, who dedicated therein a recum- 
bent colossus, seventy-five feet long, the first of its kind known to have 
existed up to that time. 

This famous temple of Hephaistos, or Ptah, was very much larger 
than the more modern temple of Karnak, which was, no doubt, modelled 
after this ancient temple of Ptah, in Memphis. There is a very curious 
story related in the " Library of Entertaining Knowledge," respecting a 



2(i0 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

monolithic chamber which formed part of this wonderful temple, where 
Moses first studied the "Wisdom peculiar to the priests of Memphis : 
" It was made of a single stone, nine cubits high, eight long, and seven 
broad, and was called the ' green chamber ' and is described as being 
found among the ruins ot Memphis. In the middle of the stone, a niche 
or hole is hollowed out, which leaves two cubits of thickness for the sides 
as well as for the top and bottom. All the rest forms the interior 
capacity of the chamber. It is completely covered, both outside and in, 
with intaglios in I'elief. On the outside is the figure of the Sun in the 
East and a great number of stars, spheres, men and animals. The men 
are represented in different attitudes, some stationary, others moving ; 
some have their dresses tucked up to allow them to work, others carry 
materials, some are giving orders. It is evident that these representa- 
tions refer to important things, remarkable actions and profound secrets. 
This niche was firmly fixed on supports of massive granite and placed 
in a magnificent temple (Hephaistos) constructed of enormous stones, 
put together with the most perfect art." 

I do not wish to pass from this part of Egypt without speaking of 
the mastabas in this vast Necropolis of ancient Memphis, for they repre- 
.sent the tombs of private individuals who lived in the grand old days of 
Memphian splendor. These tombs of various sizes, range from ten 
to forty feet in height, differing one from another at about the same ratio. 
Approaching them from a distance they have the appefirance of small 
truncated pyramids. These tombs have been thoroughly described by a 
great many writers, and I had intended giving an account of them 
myself, from personal observations, instead of which, however, I will 
substitute a quotation from Maspero's " Egyptian Archjeology," page 
no, ct scq^ because of special features in his account to which, later on 
in this work, I desire to call yoiir attention. He states that " The 
ancient monumental tombs are found in the Necropolis of Memphis, 
between Aboo Roas/i a?id DasJioor [or Da/ishoor) and belong to the 
Mastaba type, which is a quadrangiilar building, that from a distance 
might be taken for a truncated pyramid. They vary in size from thirt}^ 
to forty feet in height, one hundred and fifty in length, and eighty feet 
in width ; while others do not exceed ten feet in height. The faces 
are symmetrically inclined and generall}^ smooth, though sometimes 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 261 

the courses retreat like steps. The materials employed in their con- 
struction are generally of stone or brick. At Gizeh, the Mastabas are 
distributed according to a symmetrical plan, and ranged in regular 
streets. At Sakkarah, at Abooseer and at Dashoor, they are scattered 
irregularly over the surface of the plateau, crowded in some places, and 
wide apart in others. The Mussulman cemetery at Siout perpetuates 
the like arrangement and enables us of this day to realize the aspect of 
the Memphite Necropolis towards the close of the ancient empire. The 
doors generally face to the East. They do occasionally face towards the 
North or South, but never towards the West. In theory there should be 
two doors, one for the dead, the other for the living. In tombs for single, 
or simply one person, a short passage led to an oblong chamber upon 
which it opened. In many instances just opposite the entrance, it was 
recessed and then formed a cross. This oblong chamber was the recep- 
tion room of the Double. It was there that the relations and friends and 
priests celebrated the funerary sacrifices on the days prescribed by law ; 
such as the feast of Thoth, the feast of Uage, the feast of Sothis, etc. 
The mummy was placed in a vault beneath, that was reached by a shaft, 
varying from ten to one hundred feet in depth and a low passage in 
which one could not walk upright. There sleeps the mummy in a 
massive sarcophagus. The corpse, left to itself, received no visits now 
save from the Soul which, from time to time, quitted the celestial regions 
wherein it voyaged with the' Gods and came down to reunite itself with 
the body. The funerary vault was the abode of the Soul, as the funerary 
chapel was the abode of the Double." 

It is to the latter part of this quotation, as well as another by the 
same author, whom I again quote in Chapter XIII of this work, that I 
wish to call the especial attention of my readers, to enable them to reach 
a better understanding of " Death and After," and why, these ancient peo- 
ple embalmed their dead. 

There are many things one could write about, and so many places 
of interest worthy a description in this most arable field of observation, 
" the Valley of the Nile," did time and space permit. These comprise 
specimens of highest Egyptian Art, fully demonstrating the knowledge 
of architecture, in addition to thorough understanding of the more 
abstruse Philosophical Sciences. 



262 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

This ancient city of Memphis, like Heliopolis, furnished the stones 
for the upbuilding of Cairo. It constituted an immense quarry, from 
which those Arabian vandals drew the material with which to adorn and 
decorate their so-called " Mother of the World." The priceless treasures 
which have been lost and destroyed by these Arab Caliphs will never be 
fully known or realized. The whole of this vast Necropolis, from Gizeh 
to Sakkarah and farther, has been ransacked, torn up, excavated and 
delved into with the vain hope of recovering from the shrouding desert 
sands some of the inestimable treasures belonging to the hoary civiliza- 
tion which existed centuries before Abraham came to this country or 
Moses laid the foundation of his wisdom within those stupendous temples, 
among the Priests of Ptah, in Memphis. (Noph of the Scriptures.) 

Tliese Priests were noted for their wondrous learning and intellectual 
qualifications, ages before Greece produced her " Marble Miracles," or 
Rome led her mighty legions to conquer kingdoms. In those ancient days 
this grand old city flourished, and her Hierophants taught to those who 
were found worthy and well qualified, a knowledge of their Science, 
Arts, and Philosophies, also instructing them in the esoteric teachings of 
Ancient Egyptian Mysteries that at a far earlier period belonged to the 
Ancient Wisdom of India. At the time when Abd-el-Latyf, a very learned 
"Arabian Doctor" visited this country, in A. d. 1190, he found the city 
of Memphis in utter ruin, and remarked that the number and size of the 
various idols found among the ruins bafiSe description. He goes on to say 
that " I saw two lions facing each other within a short distance ; their as- 
pect inspired awe ; for notwithstanding their colossal size, infinitely 
larger than that of life, the sculptor had succeeded in preserving the 
truthfulness of form and of proportion." Strabo also wrote a description 
of this old city of Memphis, wherein he says : " One finds also (at Mem- 
phis) a temple of Serapis in a spot so sandy that the wind causes the sand 
to accumulate in heaps, under which we could see many sphinxes, some of 
them almost entirely buried, others only partially covered, from which we 
may conjecture that the route leading to this temple might be attended 
with danger, if one were surprised by a sudden gust of wind." 

This temple of Serapis had been the source of a long-continued 
search, but was never found until Mariette Bey, in 1S51, having been sent 
out by his government to make an inventory of the various manuscripts 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 263 

in Oriental Languages, then to be found in the various Coptic convents in 
Egypt, wandered out one day to vSakkarah, when he chanced to pass by the 
place where the drifting sands had partly exposed to view the head of 
a sphinx, as he states, " obtruding itself from the sand. This one had 
never been touched and was certainly in its original position. Close by 
lay a libation table, on which was engraved, in hieroglyphics, an in- 
scription to Osiris-Apis. The passage in Strabo suddenly occurred to my 
mind. The avenue which lay at my feet must be the one which led up 
to that Serapeum so long and so vainly sought for. But I had been 
sent to Egypt to make an inventory of manuscripts, not to seek for tem- 
ples. My mind, however, was soon made up. Regardless of all risks, 
without saying a word, and almost furtivel}"-, I gathered together a few 
workmen and the excavation began. The first attempts were hard indeed, 
but before very long lions, peacocks and the Grecian statues of the dromos, 
together with the monumental tablets, or s^e/o" of the temple of Nec- 
tanebo, were drawn out of the sand, and I was able to announce my 
siiccess to the French Government, informing them at the same time 
that the funds placed at my disposal for the researches after the manu- 
scripts were entirely exhausted and that a further grant was indispensible. 
Thus began the discovery of the Serapeum." 

This celebrated temple to-day is not in existence, but when it was, it 
no doubt resembled in appearance any other temple with its avenue of 
sphinxes that led up to the pylons which stood in front of it, and this 
especial avenue was fully six hundred feet long, within whose confines 
Mariette discovered and cleared from the drifting sands one hundred and 
forty-one sphinxes and a large number of pedestals whereon had stood 
many others which had been removed at some earlier period. But what 
most astonished him, on arriving at the end of this most extraordinary 
avenue, was to find a semicircle of statues, representing many of the most 
celebrated philosophers and writers of Greece. It was here, also, he found 
the mummy of Klia-em-uas^ an ancient Governor of Memphis, and the 
favorite son of Rameses Second, and a discovery made in this way : While 
the workmen were exploring the ancient temple an enormous lot of stones 
and debris fell and blocked their further progress. Pending their removal, 
and an order being given to get through as quickly as possible, they 
resorted to blasting, and after the smoke had cleared away discovered this 



264 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

mummy, witli its golden mask, scarabeus and other emblems of immor- 
tality, its breast covered witli jewels and precious stones of all kinds, as 
well as golden chains and amulets of every description with Hieroglyphic 
writings upon them, all identifying it as Kha-em-uas, the son of Rameses 
Second. 

This celebrated mausoleum was erected for the especial purpose of 
receiving the dead bulls, which were called Ausar-Hapi, or Serapis, by the 
Greeks, hence the name of this mausoleum {Serapeiim). But during the 
life of these so-called gods they were known as Apis^ or Hapi, who were 
worshipped at Memphis as " The second life of Ptah, and the incarna- 
tion of Osiris." The marks of Apis, by which he was known, was a 
perfectly black hide, with a square or triangular white spot upon the 
forehead, while on his shoulders the resemblance of an Eagle, or Vulture, 
for some authors differ in their descriptions of this marking ; under his 
tongue there should be a representation of a scarabeus, and the hairs 
upon his tail double. Now there is no doubt in my mind but some 
trickery was used in order to produce such a peculiar combination of 
markings, or else the populace were easilj^ satisfied with general resem- 
blances. Sometimes it was very difficult to obtain another Apis, after the 
death of the oM one, but after it was found a house was built for this 
so-called god, which had to be built facing the East. The Apis was then 
placed on a milk diet for four months, after which he would be removed 
to Memphis on or about the full of the moon, in a boat most magnificently 
decorated. Amid great rejoicings he would be placed in the Apeum, 
where special apartments were provided for him and a very fine peristyle 
court in which he could walk about. Great care was taken in the selec- 
tion of his food to prevent his getting too fat. He was not allowed to be 
seen by any one, excepting his attendants and the priest, for a period of 
forty days, and the women who attended to his wants were perfecth- nude. 
Apis had free access to all the apartments in the Apeum, as well as to the 
court. If he passed into one apartment it was considered to be a very 
lucky omen ; but if into the other it was deemed very unfortunate, in fact 
every act of Apis was oracular. It was considered a very luck}^ omen if 
he ate from the hand that offered him food ; but if he refused to eat evil 
would result to those by whom it was proffered. If Apis did not die before 
his twenty-fifth year he would be drowned ; but at his death, no matter 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 265 

how it occurred, lie would be deeply mourned b}^ the people tbrougbout 
the whole of Egypt. He would be embalmed with great care and interred 
in the Serapeum with costly ceremonies. An Apis is to be found upon 
nearlj' every mummy case, as an emblem of immortality and a symbol of 
the reincarnation of the spirit. 

One of the best specimens of a tomb of the Ancient Empire is the 
celebrated tomb of Tih, situated to the northeast of Mariette's house, and 
not far from the road to the p3'ramids of Abooseer. It is still in a remark- 
able state of preservation, no doubt due to its sandy covering, for the 
sculptures on the walls, as well as the paintings present a most magnifi- 
cent series of pictures and carvings, even to-day. This man Tih was of 
humble birth, but attained to a verj^ high position when he married a 
Nefer-hotep-s, a relative of one of the kingl}^ rulers under whom he 
served. This tomb should be visited by all who go into this wonderful 
valley of the Nile, because the interior decorations illustrate the manners 
and customs of the dynasty in which he lived {the FiftJi). Here iipon the 
walls, you ma}' see the man depicted in various scenes of everyda}' life. 
It would take too long to describe the whole of this remarkable tomb, but 
I will give 3'ou a general outline of things to be seen upon the walls of 
this most extraordinary building. Here we are enabled to see mechanics 
and laborers of all kinds working at their various trades, etc. Tih him- 
self is depicted in various scenes, one of which seemed ver}^ remarkable 
to me. He is depicted as hunting in the marshes, and represented as 
standing in a boat holding in one hand some decoy birds, while with the 
other he is throwing a boomerang at another flock. The ver}' fact of his 
having a boomerang in his hand proves that the ancient Egyptians had a 
knowledge of this most extraordinar}' instrument, one always considered 
an implement known and used solely by the natives of xA-Ustralia. 

It would be nearly impossible to describe all these pictures, in 
detail, such as hunting, fishing, farming and ship-building, as well as 
scenes in a court of justice, etc., etc., in a work of this kind; but I 
wanted to give 3'ou, my dear brothers, a general idea of what these pic- 
tures represent. They must be seen to be enjoj'ed and appreciated. To- 
day there are electric cars running to the Pyramids, so that one can go 
out there in a verj^ little while, without being bothered with donke3^s, or 
boys. 




OFFICERS AND GRAND OFFICERS OF THE SOUTHERN JURISDICTION. 



gjolomon-Ileatfi of Hiram-Cross-gjtuastita, 



267 



Hrd ptlatc vprotc a title, and put it on the cross. Hnd the 
writing was, JESUS OF NAZARETH THE KING OF THE JEWS. 

— ^JOHN 19 ; 19. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 269 




CHAPTER XII. 

SOLOMON— DEATH OF HIRAM-CROSS-SWASTICA. 

"p^ EFORE proceeding with a treatment of the subjects embraced 
I ^^ under the caption of this chapter, I desire to express astonish- 
ment at the apparent lack of interest taken in Masonic literature 
by many of the Brethren connected with our Fraternity. It is a lament- 
able fact that an immense number of brothers calling themselves Masons 
have no more idea of the esoteric teachings of our beloved Fraternity than 
the Neophyte who has not as yet received the light, being bewildered, as 
it were, by its refulgence. If you take the trouble to converse upon the 
teachings or symbology of the various degrees, you will find man}^ sadly 
deficient upon the most simple subjects. Continue your investigations 
and you will find that seemingly they have no apparent interest in the 
actual knowledge needed to make them acquainted with the Ancient 
Landmarks of the Fraternity, or even to converse upon general topics of 
interest to the intellectual student, seeking more Light ^ more Truth ; aye, 
more knowledge, not of Masonic interest only, but in the wonderful 
advance of Science, Philosophy, etc., as evidenced by researches in the 
realms of literature and the many remarkable discoveries made in the 
scientific world and utilized in this wonderful twentieth century. 

The true Mason will never be satisfied with the simple ceremonies of 
the various degrees to which he has attained, but will search among the 
beautiful symbols permeating our beloved Fraternity to discover the sub- 
limity and grandeur of the Truths underlying each and every one of 
them. Every word in these degrees is fraught with the deepest signifi- 
cance, and it is his bounden duty to endeavor to discover the hidden 
meaning of every symbol, as well as to understand the meaning of every 
word. If he is earnest in his endeavors, having passed through the 
profound and magnificent ceremonies pertaining to many of our Scottish 
Rite degrees, he will at length understand their seeming mysteries, and this 



270 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

translated kuowledge will make him a Mason in Truth and in Spirit 
plainly pointing out his Path and Duty. The great majority of Masons 
do not give enough study to the preceding degree before entering upon 
the threshold of another, and do not seem to consider or realize that the 
various degrees are like the links in a chain, connecting one with the 
other, forming among themselves a grand whole, and, as I have said 
before, the complete understanding of one degree is a keynote of compre- 
hension to the one above. Possibly you may be able to get a better idea 
of my meaning when I say that the whole of the Ancient and Accepted 
Scottish Rite degrees are analogous to mathematics, because, in order to 
thoroughly understand the Science of Numbers and Arithmetic, we must 
begin at Addition, pass on to Subtraction, rise to Multiplication and then 
advance to Division, and so on, as without the knowledge of the one we 
could not possibly understand the true meaning of the other, and so it is 
with the beautiful Degrees of our Scottish Rite Bodies. 

Hundreds of Masons do not care to study or learn the meaning of 
the beautiful symbols permeating our beloved Fraternity, but take the 
various degrees of our beloved Scottish Rite out of simple curiosity, while 
many others acquire them in the hope that it will aid them in their busi- 
ness affairs.- Again, many are desirous of passing rapidly through the 
degrees and be received as a " Master of the Roj^al Secret," to be enabled 
to wear the jewel of that degree suspended from a watch chain, who y&t 
know no more of the Royal Secret than a child unborn. Such Brothers 
are simply drones in the " Masonic Hive," and not true workers, other- 
wise they would endeavor to learn and acquire a knowledge of the profound 
Philosophies and Scientific problems which permeate our most illustrious 
Fraternity. But still there are a vast number of Brothers who are 
earnestly searching through the Symbology of the various degrees in our 
glorious Rite for the express purpose of understanding the grand Truths 
contained in its sublime Philosophies, and solving the problems of the 
Deity, Nature, the Immortality of the Soul and the development of the 
human intellect. Brothers who will ever be patient with the drones and 
sluggards and strive to help them along the path leading to greater 
exertions, and endeavor to implant within their hearts an earnest desire 
to know the Holy Doctrine and the Ke}^ to the Ro3^al Secret. It is very 
difficult to solve some of the symbols of the ancient Mysteries and ancient 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 271 

Masonry, and inan}^ of our modern writers give a wrong interpretation 
to them, often leading persons astray wlio are trying to understand them. 
The old secrets and symbols have been revelled, or hidden, on purpose to 
conceal their real meaning from the Profane, and j-et the earnest student 
who has obtained the key through profound study finds no difficulty in 
coming to an understanding of their sublime teachings. The word reveal 
is a very curious and misleading one, if taken in its general accepted sense, 
because the Latin word revelare^ from which we derive the word reveal, or 
revealed, is just the opposite to the generall}^ accepted meaning of it in 
English ; for re-velare signifies to reveil, and not to reveal, i. <?., from re 
again, or back, and velare to hide, or cover ; to veil from the eyes of those 
who were unworthy. One of the First to reveal [reveil or liide] the sym- 
bology of the ancient Mysteries of India, so as to preserve and practice 
them in the valley of the Nile, was Hermes, and long centuries after him 
the Jewish Lawgiver Moses, who revelled or hid away in the Wisdom of 
the Ancient Egyptians all the Egypto-Chaldean theological legends and 
allegories. 

To bear me out in the above statement I will quote you from " Mor- 
als and Dogmas," page 104 : " Masonry, like all the Religions, all the 
Mysteries, Hermeticism and Alchemy, conceals its secrets from all except 
the Adepts and Sages, or the Elect, and uses false explanations and mis- 
interpretations of its symbols to mislead those who deserve to be misled ; 
to conceal the Truth, which it calls Light, from them, and to draw them 
away from it. Truth is not for those who are unworthy or unable to re- 
ceive it, or would prevent it. So God Himself incapacitates many men, 
by color blindness, to distinguish colors, and leads the masses away from 
the highest Truth, giving them the power to attain only so much of it 
as is profitable to them to know. Every age has had a religion suited 
to its capacity. The teachers even of Christianity, are in general, the 
most ignorant of the true meaning of that which they teach. There is 
no book of which so little is known as the Bible. To most who read it, 
it is as incomprehensible as the Sohar. So Masonry zealously conceals 
its secrets, and intentionally leads conceited interpreters astray. There 
is no sight under the sun more pitiful and ludicrous at once, than the 
Prestons and the Webbs, not to mention the later incarnations of Dull- 
ness and commonplace, undertaking to ' explain ' the old symbols of 



272 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Masonry, and added to and 'improving' tliein, or inventing new ones. 
To the circle, enclosing the central point, and itself traced between two 
parallel lines, a figure purely Kabalistic, these persons have added the 
superimposed Bible and even reared on that the ladder with three or nine 
rounds, and then given a vapid interpretation of the whole, so pro- 
foundly absurd as actually to excite admiration." 

Brother J. D. Buck, in his very valuable little work, " Mystic 
Masonry " says, on page 253, that " The real secrets of Masonry lie con- 
cealed in its Symbols, and these, constituting as they do a Picture lan- 
guage, or Art Speech, are made to carry a complete philosophy of the 
existence and relations of Deity, Nature and Man. The average Mason, 
taking the symbols for the things symbolized and knowing nothing of 
the profound philosophy upon which they rest, is incredulous that it 
ever existed, and so he treads the ' burning sands ' in search of a novel 
sensation, or a new joke. As mere pastimes these jovial entertainments 
are neither better nor worse than many others. They represent one ex- 
treme into which the Ancient Wisdom has degenerated. Let every intel- 
ligent Mason reflect on the sublimity and sanctity of the ceremonies in 
some of the Degrees, where the name of the Deity is invoked, where the 
highest moral precepts are inculcated, and where the purest and most 
exalted ethics are taught." 

I have already spoken of Solomon's temple and alluded to the fact 
that a great many brethren actually believe Masonry to have originated 
with the building of that edifice by the Wise King of Israel, but, if they 
will only pause to consider this matter carefully, they will find that this, 
like many other things in Masonry, is purely Symbolical. For, as I 
have herein before stated, " Masonry is a peculiar system of Moralty, 
veiled in Allegory and Illustrated by Symbols," and this building of a 
temple by Sol-om-on is one of the most beautiful allegories in Masonry, 
full of profound symbology, as there is not a thing mentioned in relation 
to this temple that is not purely symbolical, which will probably ac- 
count for the fact that to-day not a single vestige of it can be found 
among the squalid hovels in the ancient city of Jerusalem. The 
traditional history of this fabric, as well as many of the most mag- 
nificent temples of Egypt and Assyria have passed into the realm of 
fable. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 273 

We can, most certainly, find a grand account of the temple of 
Sol-om-on in all its dimensions in the Bible, and this very account 
demonstrates the Science of Numbers as taught by Pythagoras and his 
school, for Numbers were considered by him and his pupils to lie at the 
root of all manifestations, to understand every element of which was to 
thoroughly comprehend the upbuilding of molecular forms. In fact the 
Secret Doctrine tells us that " know the corresponding numbers of the 
fundamental principles of every element and its sub-elements ; learn their 
interaction and behavior on the occult side of manifesting nature, and the 
law of correspondences will lead you to the discovery of the greatest mys- 
teries of macrocosmical life." 

According to many of our Scientific Masonic writers, the building 
of Sol-om-on's temple is a beautiful allegory of the evolution or building 
of man. 

Let me quote you once more from Brother J. D. Buck's " Mystic 
Masonr}'," pages 72, 102, 148: "In the ritual of Masonr}^ King Solo- 
mon's temple is taken as a symbol. The building and the restoration of 
the temple at Jerusalem are dramatically represented in the work of the 
Lodge, and in the ceremony of initiation, by a play upon words and 
parity of events, and applied to the candidate, with admonition, warning 
or encouragement, as the drama unfolds. The measurements and pro- 
portion of the temple are dwelt upon in order to bring in the science of 
numbers, form and proportion, so manifest in architecture, and to connect 
them with the ' spiritual temple ' with which they all have the same, 
though less obvious, relations. The symbolism is fitted to ideal rela- 
tions, rather than to actual existences or historical events. Sol-om-on 
represents the name of the Deity in three languages, and the biblical 
history is doubtless an allegory, or myth of the Sun-god. There is no 
reliable history of the construction of any such temple at Jerusalem, 
and recent explorations and measurements have greatly altered the 
dimensions as heretofore given. Hiram Abiff is dramatically represented 
to have lost his life when the temple was near completion, and yet it is 
recorded that after the completion of the temple he labored for years 
to construct and ornament a palace for the King. Add to these facts 
the statement that the temple was constructed without the sound of 
hammer or anj^ tool of iron, and it is thus likened more nearly to that 

18 



274 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

other ' Spiritual Temple, not made with hands, eternal in the heavens,' 
and the literal and historic features disappear, and the symbolism stands 
out in bold relief. .... The real temple referred to from first to last in 
Masonry, as in all initiations, is the Tabernacle of the Human Soul. 

" It is built, indeed, without the sound of hammer or any tool of 
iron. It is like (made in the likeness of) that other, spiritual temple, 
not made with hands ; eternal in the heavens ; for the old philosophy 
(Kabalah) teaches that the Immortal Spirit of man is the artificer of 
the body and its source of life ; that it does not so much enter 
in, as overshadow man, while the Soul, the immediate vehicle of 
Spirit, inhabits the body, and is dissipated at death. The Spirit 
is Immortal, pure and forever nndefiled; It is Christos or Hiram, 
the mediator between the Soul, or physical man, and the Universal 

Spirit The ' designs on the trestleboard for the biiilding of the 

temple ' are the laws that determine the evolution of the Higher Self in 
Man ; while the execution of the plan or the construction of the temple in 
accordance with the plan, means a transformation of the earthly taber- 
nacle — the lower nature — into a likeness with ' that other spiritual 
temple.'" 

Brother Albert Pike, in " Morals and Dogmas," page 235, says, 
" How completely the Temple of Solomon was symbolic, is manifest, not 
only from the continual reproduction in it of the sacred numbers and of 
astrological symbols in the historical description of it ; but also, and yet 
more, from the details of the imaginary reconstructed edifice, seen by 
Ezechiel in his vision. The Apocalypse completes the demonstration, 
and shows the Kabalistic meanings of the whole. The Symbola Archi- 
tectonica are found on the most ancient edifices, and these mathematical 
figures and instruments, adopted by the Templars, and identical with 
those ou the gnostic seals and abraxae, connect their dogma with the 
Chaldaic, Syriac and Egyptian Oriental philosophy. The secret Pytha- 
gorean doctrines of numbers were preserved by the monks of Thibet, 
by the . Hierophants of Eg3'pt and Eluesis, at Jerusalem, and in the 
circular chapters of the Druids ; and they are especially consecrated in 
that mysterious book the Apocalypse of Saint John." 

There is no question to my mind but that the whole account of 
Sol-om-on and the temple is simply and purely allegorical, and I there- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 275 

fore cousider it to be the greatest piece of absurdity imaginable, to claim 
Sol-om-on as one of our first Grand Masters, and that Masonry spang 
into immediate existence at the building of the temple, for this reason I 
quote various opinions from different Masonic writers, as well to sub- 
stantiate my assertions as to demonstrate that I do not stand alone in 
this opinion, and desire to prove the Truth in relation to this matter 
through the assertion of other writers as well as my own. 

I remember being in the city of San Francisco and in the ofi&ce of 
the late Brother C. M. Plummer, manager and editor of the " Trestle 
Board," on California Street, when, during a lull in our conversation, I 
broached the subject of Sol-om-on's temple to my learned friend, when he 
said to me : " Doctor, 3'ou know my opinion respecting this subject ; but, 
in addition to what I have told you, read this," and he handed me a copy 
of his book and pointed to an article, which reads as follows : " So far as 
regards the essential features of it (the temple) it was designed b}' the 
Almighty, and Sol-om-on had very little to do Avith it beyond the 
carrying out of specific directions. We may admire the proportions of 
it and magnify its glories to our heart's content, without in the least 
admitting that Sol-om-on was a Mason, for his connection with it by 
no means proves that he was such. If he was, then it follows that all 
the overseers, the workmen in the forests, and in the quarries, were 
Masons. 

"This brings us to the position that at that time there were some one 
hundred and fifty thousand Masons in the little territory of Palestine, 
nearly twice as many as are now in the most populous State in this 
country, which is a palpable absurdity. We are told that there were 
eighty thousand fellow^s of the craft, seventy thousand entered appren- 
tices, and three thousand overseers concerned in the building of the 
temple, not considering those who got away before they could be 
counted. If any one wishes to believe this he is free to do so, for there 
is no constitutional provision forbidding him to believe anything that 
may find lodgment in his mind. But to hold that a belief in these 
things is to condition one's standing as a ]\Iason, is too ridiculous for 
serious consideration. If any one wants to believe that King Sol-om-on 
was a Free INIason, or that Prester John really had any existence, or that 
the man in the moon came down too soon, and burnt his mouth eating 



276 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

cold porridge, wliy, we have nothing to say except that it takes all kinds 
of people to make the world." ■ — -Masonic Guide. 

I will make another qnotation and this time from " The Secret 
Societies of All Ages," by C. W. Heckethorn, Vol. II, and pages as per 
articles quoted. I know that these articles will amuse my Masonic read- 
ers and friends and give them some very extraordinary ideas in relation 
to "The Legend of the Temple" — Solomon, Hiram, and the Queen of 
Sheba, and what led up to or caused the " death of Hiram" — every word 
of which will no doubt be of the deepest interest to many, as the greatest 
farce that was ever written upon Masonic history. 

" The Legend of the Temple, Ancestry of Hiram Abiff," Vol. 
II, page 3-3S3 : Solomon having determined on the erection of the 
temple, collected artificers, divided them into companies, and pi;t them 
under the command of Adoniram, or Hiram Abiff, the architect sent to 
him b}' his friend and ally, Hiram, King of Tyre. According to mythical 
tradition, the ancestry of the builders of the mystical temple was as fol- 
lows : One of the Elo-him, or Genii, married Eve and had a son called 
Cain (120), whilst Jehova or Adonai, another of the Elo-him, created 
Adam and united him with Eve to bring forth the family of Abel, to 
whom were subjected the sons of Cain, as a punishment for the trans- 
gression of Eve. Cain, though industriously cultivating the soil, yet 
derived little produce from it, whilst Abel leisurely tended his flocks. 
Adonai rejected the gifts and sacrifices of Cain, and stirred up strife 
between the sons of the Elo-him generated out of fire, and the sons of 
Abel the noble family that invented the arts and different sciences. 
Enoch, a son of Cain, taught men to hew stone, constructed edifices, and 
form civil societies. Ired and Mehujael, his son and grandson, set 
boundaries to the waters, and fashioned cedars into beams. Methusael, 
another of his descendents, invented the sacred characters, the books of 
Tan and the symbolic "f", b}- which the workers, descended from the genii 
of fire, recognized each other. Lamach, whose prophecies are i\iexplic- 
able to the profane, was the father of Jubal, who first taught men how to 
dress camel's skins ; of Jubal, who discovered the harp ; of Naamah, who 
discovered the arts of spinning and weaving; of Tubal Cain, who first 
constructed a furnace, worked in metal, and dug subterranean caves 
in the mountains to save his race during the deluge, birt it perished 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. '^•Tl 

nevertlieless, and only Tubal Cain and his son, the sole survivors of the 
glorious and gigantic family came out alive. The wife of Ham, second 
son of Noah, thought the son of Tubal Cain handsomer than the sons of 
men, and he became the progenitor of Nimrod, who taug?it his brethren 
the art of hunting, and founded Babylon. Adoniram, the descendant of 
Tubal Cain, seemed called by God to lead the militia of the free men, 
connecting the sons of fire with the sons of thought, progress and 
truth. 

J84. " Hiram, Solomon and the Queen of Sheba — By Hiram 
was erected a marvellous building, the Temple of Solomon. He raised 
the golden throne of Solomon, most beautifully wrought, and built many 
other glorious edifices. But melancholy amidst all his greatness, he 
lived alone, understood and loved by few, hated b}- manj- and among 
others by Solomon, envious of his genius and glory. Now, the fame of 
the Wisdom of Solomon spread to the remotest ends of the earth ; and 
Balkis, the Queen of Sheba, came to Jerusalem to. greet the great King 
and behold the marvel of his reign. She found Solomon seated on a 
throne of gilt cedar-wood, arrayed in cloth of gold, so that at first she 
seemed to behold a statue of gold, with hands of ivory. 

"Solomon received her with every kind of festive preparation, and 
led her to behold his palace, and then the grand works of the temple, and 
the Queen was lost in admiration. The King was captivated b}- her 
beauty and in a short time offered her his hand, which the Queen, pleased 
at having conquered this proud heart, accepted. But on again visiting the 
temple, she repeatedly desired to see the architect, who had wrought such 
wondrous things. 

" Solomon delayed as long as possible presenting Hiram Abifif to the 
Queen, but at last he was obliged to do so. The mystesious artificer was 
brought before her, and cast on the Queen a look that penetrated her very 
heart. Having recovered her composure, she questioned and defended 
him against the ill-will and rising jealousy of the King. When she 
wished to see the countless host of workmen that had wrought at the tem- 
ple. Solomon protested the impossibility of assembling them all at once ; 
but Hiram, leaping upon a stone, the better to be seen, with his right 
hand described in the air the S3nnbolic Tan and immediately the men 
hastened from all parts of the works into the presence of their Master. 



'-^T^^ EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

At this the Queen wondered greatly, and secretly repented of the promise 
she had given the King, for she felt herself in love with the mighty 
aixhitect. Solomon set himself to destroy this affection, and to prepare 
his rival's humiliation and ruin. For this purpose he employed three 
fellow-crafts, envious of Hiram, because he had refused to raise them to 
the degree of Masters on account of their want of knowledge and their 
idleness. The}' were Fanon, a Syrian and a Mason ; Amrii a Phcenician 
and a carpenter, and Metusael, a Hebrew and a Miner. The black envy 
of these projected that the casting of the brazen sea, which was to raise 
the glory of Hiram to its utmost height, should turn out a failure. A 
young workman, Beuoui, discovered the plot and revealed it to Solomon, 
thinking that sufficient. 

" The day for the casting arrived, and Balkis was present, the doors 
that restrained the molten metal were opened, and torrents of liquid fire 
poured into the vast mould whei'ein the brazen sea was to assume its 
form. But the burning mass ran over the edges of the mould, and 
flowed like lava over the adjacent places. The terrified crowd fled 
from the advancing stream of fire. Hiram calm, like a god, endeavored 
to arrest its advance witli ponderous columns of water, but without 
success. The waters and the fire mixed, and the struggle was terrible ; 
the water rose in dense steam, and fell down in the shape of fiery rain, 
spreading terror and death. The dishonored needed the sympathy of a 
faithful heart ; he called Benoui, but in vain ; the proud ^-outh perished 
in endeavoring to prevent the horrible catastrophe when he found Solo- 
mon had done nothing to hinder it. Hiram could not withdraw himself 
from the scene of his discomfiture. Oppressed with grief he heeded not 
the danger, he remembered not that this ocean of fire might speedily 
engulf him ; he thought of the Queen of Sheba, who came to admire and 
congratulate him on a great triumph, and who saw nothing but a terrible 
disaster. Suddenly he lieard a strange voice coming from above, and 
crying, ' Hiram, Hiram, Hiram.' He raised his ej^es and beheld a gigantic 
human figure. The apparition continued, ' Come, m^' sou, be without 
fear, I have rendered thee incombustible ; cast th3'self into the flames.' 
Hiram threw himself into the furnace, and where others would have 
found death, he tasted ineff'able delights ; nor could he be drawn by an 
irresistible force to leave it, and asked him who drew him into the abyss, 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 279 

' Whither do you take me ? ' ' Into the centre of the earth, into the soul 
of the world, into the Kingdom of great Cain, where liberty reigns with 
him. There the tyrannous envy of Adonai ceases ; there can we, despising 
his anger, taste the fruit of the tree of knowledge; there is the home of 
I hy fathers.' * Who then am I, and who art thoii ? ' 'I am the father of 
thy fathers, I am the son of Lamach, I am Tubal Cain.' 

"Tubal Cain introduced Hiram into the sanctuary of iire, where he 
expounded to him the weakness of Adonai, and the base passions of that 
god, the enemy of his own creatures whom he condemned to the inexora- 
ble law of death, to avenge the benefits the genii of fire had bestowed 
on him. Hiram was led into the presence of the author of his race, Cain. 
The angel of Light that begat Cain was reflected in the beauty of this 
son of Love, whose noble and generous mind roused the envy of Adonai. 
Cain related to Hiram his experiences, sufferings, and misfortunes, 
brought upon him by the implacable Adonai. Presently he heard the 
voice of him who was the offspring of Tubal Cain and his sister, Naamah : 
' A son shall be born unto thee whom thou shalt indeed not see, but 
whose numerous descendants shall perpetuate thy race, which, superior 
to that of Adam, shall acquire the empire of the world; for many cen- 
tnries they shall consecrate their courage and genius to the service of the 
ever-ungrateful race of Adam, but at last the best shall become the 
strongest and restore on earth the worship of fire. Thy sons, invincible 
in thy name, shall destroy the power of kings, the ministers of Adonai's 
tyranny. Go, my son, the genii of the fire are with thee ! ' Hiram was 
restored to the earth. Tubal Cain, before quitting him, gave him the 
hammer with which he himself had wrought great things and said to 
him : ' Thanks to this hammer, and the help of the genii of fire, thou 
shalt speedily accomplish the work left unfinished through man's stupid- 
ity and malignity ! ' Hiram did not hesitate to test the wonderful 
efficacy of the precious instrument, and the dawn saw the great mass of 
bronze cast. The artist felt the most lively joy, the queen exulted. The 
people came running up, astounded at this secret power which had in one 
night repaired everything." 

j<?5. " Murder of Hiram. — One day the queen, accompanied by her 
maids, went beyond Jerusalem, and there encountered Hiram, alone, and 
thoughtful. The encounter was decisive ; they mutually confessed their 



280 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

love. Had-Had, the bird who filled, with the Queen, the office of messen- 
ger of the genii of fire, seeing Hiram in the air make the sign of the 
mystic "f, flew around his head and settled on his wrist. At this Sarahel, 
the nurse of the queen, exclaimed, ' The oracle is fulfilled, she recog- 
nized the husband which the genii of fire destined for Balkis whose love 
alone she dare ! ' They hesitated no longer, but mutually pledged their 
vows, and deliberated how Balkis could retract the promise given to the 
king. 

"Hiram was the first to quit Jerusalem ; the queen, impatient to join 
him in Arabia, was to elude the vigilance of the king, which she accom- 
plished by withdrawing the ring from his finger, while he was overcome 
with wine, the ring wherewith she had plighted her troth to him. Solo- 
mon hinted to the Fellow-crafts that the removal of his rival, who refused 
to give them the Master's word, would be acceptable unto himself; so 
when the architect came to the temple he was assaulted and slain by 
them. Before his death, however, he had time to throw the golden 
triangle which he wore around his neck, and on which was engraven the 
Master's word, into a deep well. They wrapped up his body, carried it 
to a solitary hill, and buried it, planting over the grave a sprig of accacia. 
Hiram, not having made his appearance for seven days, Solomon, against 
his inclination, but to satisfy the clamour of the people, was forced to 
have him searched for. The body was found by three Masters, and they, 
suspecting that he had been slain by the three Fellow-crafts for refusing 
them the Master's word, determined, nevertheless, for greater security, to 
change the word, and that the first word accidentally uttered on raising 
the body should thenceforth be the word. In the act of raising it, the 
skin came off the body, so that one of the Masters exclaimed ' Machbe- 
nach ! ' (the flesh is off the bones, or the brother is smitten), and this 
word became the sacred word of the Master's degree. 

" The three fellow-crafts were traced, but rather than fall into the 
hands of their pursuers, they committed suicide, and their heads were 
brought to Solomon. The triangle not having been found on the body of 
Hiram, it was sought for and at last discovered in the well in which the 
architect had cast it. The King caused it to be placed on a triangiilar 
altar erected in a secret vault, built under the most retired part of the 
temple. The triangle was further concealed by a cubical stone, on which 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 281 

had been inscribed the sacred law. The vault, the existence of which was 
only known to the twenty-seven elect, was then walled up. 

402. " The Legend Explained. — Taken literally, the story of 
Hiram would offer nothing so extraordinary as to deserve to be com- 
memorated after three thousand years throughout the world by solemn 
rites and ceremonies. The death of an architect is not so important a 
matter as to have more honor paid to it than is shown to the memory 
of so many philosophers and learned men, who have lost their lives in 
the cause of human progress. But Historj^ knows nothing of him. His 
name is only mentioned in the Bible, and it is simply said of him that he 
was a man of understanding and cunning in working in brass. Tradition 
is equally silent concerning him. He is remembered nowhere except in 
Freemasonry ; the legend in fact is purely allegorical, and may bear a 
two- fold meaning." 

This account is most certainly correct in its claim of Hiram Abiff 
being unknown to history, outside the Bible and the Legends of Free- 
masonry, as with these exceptions his name is positivel}^ not mentioned. 
The Masonic student will, however, very readily recognize in Hiram the 
Osiris of the Egyptians, Mithras, the Sun God of the Persians, Bachus 
of the Greeks, etc., etc. He will recognize, in the celebrations of Chris- 
tianity, in the Passion, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, the same 
idea that permeated the ancient world thousands of years before he was 
born. History informs us that Christ, the Saviour, was cruciiied upon a 
cross, an emblem which has been in existence in every age of the world's 
history. In fact the Cross, Circle and Swastica are as old as Man himself, 
and represent symbols which express deep Scientific Truths that will 
unveil to the Masonic student profound Psychological and Physiological 
mysteries. These mysteries have been hidden from the " profane " in 
every country in which we find them. To all those who, earnestly and 
diligently search for their origin, these symbols will take them back into 
the depth of the hoary Archaic ages of the long forgotten centuries, and 
they will realize that the farther they go back the more difficult will be 
their interpretation and the more abstruse their meaning. 

These symbols can be plainly traced from the frozen Fjords of Nor- 
way throughout the whole of Europe. From Patagonia all through the 
South American continent up into the most Northern parts of British 



282 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Columbia and Alaska are to be found evidences of tbese universal symbols. 
All through India, China, Egypt, Persia, Chaldea and Babylon we find 
them, and even upon those extraordinary statues found on Easter Island, 
relics of the ancient Lemurians in the southern Pacific Ocean, these 
mystic emblems are blazoned. From out the shadowy depths of the cave 
temples of India these most extraordinary symbols greet our searching 
gaze. So we find in every "corner" of the earth, in every clime and 
country those emblems of antiquity, and realize that with all our efforts 
we are unable to trace them to any particular Nation or Race. We are 
compelled to stand before them with awe and reverence, full of profound 
thought, perplexed and bewildered before, the endless shadows they cast 
backward into the hoary ages of Antiquity. 

The Christian firmly believes the Cross to be the symbol of redemp- 
tion, considering it to be piirely and simply a Christian emblem, not 
knowing that it was used by the ancient Phoenicians long before Christ 
was crucified, or the Jews were a people, or a nation. The great majority 
claim that the Cross, with the Man upon it, is distinctly a Christian 
symbol, introduced into the Christian world and churches, after the Cruci- 
fixion of Christ on Calvary, which is a very strange assertion, for this 
emblem existed long centuries before Christ was born. And right here I 
wish to state that Christ was not the only Saviour crucified upon a Cross, 
as in the fourteenth chapter of this work I will give an account, as recorded 
in history, of Sixteen Saviours who died upon a Cross in the same manner 
that Christ did, and for the very same purpose, " for the sins and trans- 
gressions of the human race." 

The Ancient Egyptians, or the people who colonized this country, 
settled upon the banks of the wondrous old river Nile, in the misty ages 
of the past, and no matter where they came from, they most certainly 
brought with them a knowledge of the Arts, Sciences and Philosophies, 
and very soon after their arrival overpowered the barbarous native popu- 
lation. They immediately began to adorn the banks of the grand old 
river with those stupendous architectural monuments Avhose ver}' rviins 
are the admiration of the Scientific world of to-day, many of which have 
long since passed into the realm of fables. Notwithstanding the long 
drifting centuries which have rolled away since they established them- 
selves upon that grand old river Nile, there still remain to us specimens 




en 
O 

X 

h- 

i i 

Ll w 

O g 



UJ 

I- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 283 

of their handiwork, testifying to the knowledge that pertained to these 
Ancient Egyptians long ages before Babylon bowed her mighty head 
before the yoke of Cyrns. 

After these ancient people had thoroughly established llieniselves in 
this wondrous valley they began to notice that although no rain ever fell 
in that country for agricultural purposes, yet the glorious old river woxild 
generally overflow its banks, when the croi)s would be assured and everj'- 
thing grow in abundance throughout the whole of the " Land of Egypt." 
After these ancient people had increased and multiplied in numbers, and 
the various parts of this fertile vallc}' had been divided into Nonics, for 
administrative purposes, the people in all parts of Egypt, throughout the 
various Nomes, when crops were assured, and in order to determine the 
fact of a year of plenty, through an abundance of water, carefully 
observed the movements of the river and its annual inundations. The 
better to observe its rise and the height to which it attained, in order to tax 
the people, they drove down into the l)os()m of the river a perpendicular 
stake, or pole, whereon certain marks were made, thai they could tell of 
its motions, as when it reached a certain point they would be enabled to 
tax the people, for the crops would be assured. 

The men stationed to watch the rising river, " guardians of the 
Nile," were driven back by the flooding waters, and could not distinguish 
the markings upon the stake ; in consequence they nailed a horizontal 
board at the required point and in this way the Nilomcter became a 
Cross. Now, if the rising river reached the arms of the Cross they 
taxed the people accordingly. Every year of plenty when old God Nilus 
brought from the very heart of Africa to the very doors of the dwelling- 
places of these people the fruits of the field, in the plentiness thereof, 
they were exceedingly glad, and feasted and rejoiced in the fullness of 
heart, with grand processions and magnificent ceremonies, throughout 
the whole of the " Land of Egypt." They manifested their joy with 
sounding cymbals, tinkling sistrums, the double pipes, etc. Amid the 
revels were to be seen all classes, and at night the priests of the various 
temples illuminated them in honor of the goodness of their old god Nilus 
(hence the origin of the Christian feast of Candlemas). 

But sometimes this grand old river would not overflow its banks, 
would fail to swell and increase in volume, when no water would flow 



284 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

upon the parched and thirsty soil and the corps could not grow. At 
such times the " guardians of the Nile," and the people themselves, with 
bated breath and anxious eyes, would gaze upon the Nilometer in fear 
and anxious expectancy, until, realizing with saddened hearts, that the 
river would not overflow its banks to fill their cisterns and furnish life to 
the seeds implanted in the soil. The consequence would be a drought 
and scarcity of food, as nothing would grow for that year for the susten- 
ance of either themselves or their domestic animals. 

Then throughout the '' Land of Eg3'pt " would go a wail of woe 
and mourning, in place of feasting and rejoicings ; darkness instead of 
grand illuminations, while misery and gaunt Famine stalked throughout 
this wondrous valley. The " guardians of the Nile," when assured the 
river would not overflow its banks, would make small Nilometers (a cross), 
fasten upon them the emblem of a starving man, and send them out 
through the length and breadth of the valley of the Nile as symbols of 
Famine, warning the people to be careful of what store of food they had, 
for a drought was at hand, and that this 3'ear no crops would grow on 
account of the river not overflowing its banks. This emblem of famine 
has very often been mistaken by travellers for the emblem of Chris- 
tianity, or Christ upon the Cross. 

I will now quote you from the Introduction to " Mystic Masonry," 
page 15 : " That superstructure known as Christianity has, it is true, 
mau}^ historical phases ; of dogmas the most contradictor}^ ; of doctrines 
promulgated in one age and enforced with vice-regal authorit}' and severe 
penalties for denial and disbelief, only to be denied and repudiated as 
' damnable heresy ' in another age. In the meantime, the origin of these 
doctrines, and the personality of the iMaii of Sorrows^ around which these 
traditions cluster, receive no adequate support from authentic history. 
What, then, shall we conclude regarding the real genius of Christianit}^ ? 
Is it all a fable, put forth and kept alive by designing men, to support 
their pretensions to authority ? Are historical facts and , personal 
biography alone entitled to credit, while everlasting principles, Divine 
Beneficence, and the laj'ing down of one's life for another are of no 
account ? Is that which has inspired the hope and brightened the lives 
of the down-trodden and despairing for ages a mere fanc}^, a designing 
lie? Tear away every shred of history from the life of Cltrist to-day, and 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 285 

prove bej-ond all controversy that lie never existed, and Humanity, from 
its lieart of hearts, would create him again to-morrow, and justify the 
creation by every intuition of the human soul, and by every need of the 
daily life of man. The historical contention might be given up, ignored, 
and the whole character, genius and mission oi Jcsiis the Christ, be none 
the less real, beneficent and eternal, with all of its human and dramatic 
episodes. Explain it as you will, it never can be explained away ; the 
character remains ; and whether Historical or Ideal, it is real and eternal. 
The real thread is to be sought for in the theme that runs through the 
symphony of creation ; in the lofty Ideals that inspire the life of man, and 
lead him from the clod and the lowlands, where hover the ghosts of 
superstition and fear to the mountains of light, where dwell forever 
inspiration and peace. Such ideals are the Christ Hirani^ and the 
Pej-fect Master:' 

The teachings of Christ are as old as man himself, and embody the 
Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood of Man, and the key-note to all 
is Love, and the practice of Self-LESS-ness. All men are brothers by 
the Laws of God and Nature, and as it is impossible to get away from 
this fact, the sooner it is understood the better it will be for the whole 
Humau famih'. Ever3-thing in Nature goes to prove the Universal 
Brotherhood of Man, and that he is a part of the Divine Whole, subject 
to the laws and forces he himself has set in vibration. I have stood upon 
the shifting sands that border the gulfs, seas and oceans from India to 
Siberia, from the fjords of Norwaj- to the Caspian sea, and have watched 
the surging waves as the}' came rolling in upon the beach in r3'thmic 
harmonj', singing the same plaintive song in every country, in every 
clime ; and while m}- Avife and I were standing upon the beach at Santa 
Cruz, watching the long rolling waves, one lovely morning in November, 
when the wind was blowing fresh from the northwest, with the sun 
shining brightl}' from an unclouded skv, we looked around the ocean and 
saw the white caps come and go upon the crested waves, to the harmony 
of Nature's melody in F. As the wind increased, long combing waves 
came rolling in along the beach, in one continuous, ceaseless roar, up to 
our very feet, and the seething foam went drifting before the wind high 
up out of the waters upon the beach above. As we stood there, watching 
the hollow roaring waves, my attention was attracted to a tinj;- piece of 



286 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

shell or a very white grain of sand being driven hither and thither by the 
rushing, rolling waters. At one time it would be high up upon the 
beach, out of the drifting waters for awhile ; but, behold, another wave, 
larger and stronger, drags it back again, into the surging, seething mass 
of foamy waters, and it is lost from our sight. Again it would be thrown 
up into view and as quickly dragged back again, by the ruthless under- 
tow, but once more it was thrown, with an irresistible force, upon the wet 
shimmering sands up to my feet. At last I stooped and picked it up 
from out the flecks of foam which surrounded it and held it within the 
hollow of my hand. As I gazed upon its tiny form I thought of 
" Karma," and said to my wife. How well this little speck of sand repre- 
sents man and the vicissitudes of Life, a'nd how his previous acts, the 
seeds that he has sown, build up the powers that drag him this way, and 
the other, with overwhelming force, coming to him like the little grain of 
sand with irresistible strength and power, and smite him down ; aye, when 
his hopes are at the very flood-tide of happiness and glorious realization. 

Circumstances over which he has no control compel him to adapt 
himself to the Just and mighty Law of Cause and Effect, Km-ma^ and 
verifies the teaching of Christ when he said " that which j'e sow, that 
must ye also- reap." And we recognized the insignificance of man in the 
tiny grain of sand, for it, like him, is part of the Divine whole, and began 
to realize that every grain of sand had at one time a different form ; but 
like all molecular manifestations, it had changed its form for the purpose 
of the upbuilding of higher bodies, and recognized that the very rocks 
and stones were subservient to the great and mighty Law of self-sacrifice, 
and thought with the Hindu philosopher that " The dawn is in the 
sacrifice." The Masonic student and thinking man, of this twentieth 
century, knows this to be a positive fact. " The Eternal Pilgrim " in his 
passage from Rock to Man, demonstrates that every other kingdom is 
sacrificed for the upbuilding of humanity ; but we must distinctly under- 
stand that the Lower kingdoms have to adapt themselves to this Eternal 
Law of sacrifice. There is no choice for them. With Man it is very 
different ; he is dowered with a self-conscious knowledge, and he learns to 
choose and follow the Law under Divine guidance. 

As I have previousl}^ spoken of the antiquity of Swastica, or 
Svastica, I will now state that there is no symbol in existence to-day 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 287 

more pregnant with occult meaning than this emblem, if we except the 
white leather lamb-skin, the badge of a Mason. The Swastica is in 
the form of a Greek cross with the ends bent at right angles. It is 
found in everj^ country upon the face of the earth and some of the best 
specimens found in America were discovered b}' a Mr. Morehead in an 
Indian mound in the State of Ohio. They were formed out of copper 
and are perfect specimens of their kind, demonstrating that the}- were 
known and used by the North American Indians. Le Plongeon men- 
tions them as found in Yucatan, and I, myself, have seen these symbols 
in ever}^ country throughout the world, and we may see it in use to-day 
upon the seal of the Theosophical Society. Notwithstanding the uni- 
versal identity of this symbol, I most firmly believe that it emanated 
from the " Land of the Vedas." 

Let me quote you from the "Secret Doctrine," page 103, et seq : 
" The Svastica is the most philosophicall}^ scientific of all symbols, 
as also the most comprehensible. It is the summary in a few lines of 
the whole work of ' creation,' or evolution, as one should rather say, 
from Cosmotheogony down to Anthropogony, from the indivisible 
unknown, Parabraham, to the humble moneron of materialistic Science, 
whose genesis is zmknown to that Science as it is that of the All-Deity 
itself. The Svastica is found heading the religious symbols of all nations. 
It is the 'Workers Hammer' in the Chaldean Book of Numbers^ the 
' Hammer ' above, referred to the Book of concealed Mystery, ' which 
striketh sparks from the flint ' (Space), those sparks becoming Worlds. 
It is Thor's Hammer, the magic weapon forged by the Dwarfs against 
the Giants, or the Pre-cosmic Titanic Forces of Nature, which rebel, and, 
while alive in the region of matter, will not be subdued b}^ the gods — the 
agents of Universal Harmonj' — but have first to be destroyed. This is 
why the earth is formed out of the relics of the murdered Ymir. The 
Svastica is the Miolnir, the ' Storm-hammer,' and therefore it is said that 
when the Ases, the holy gods, after having been purified by fire — the fire 
of the passions and suffering in their life incarnations — become fit to 
dwell in Ida in eternal peace then IMiolnir will become useless. This 
will be when the bonds of Hel — the goddess — queen of the region of the 
Dead — will bind them no longer, for the kingdom of evil will have 
passed away. 



288 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

" Verily many are its meanings ! In the Macrocosmic work ' Ham- 
mer of Creation,' with its four arms bent at right angles, refers to the 
continual motion and revolution of the invisible Kosmos of Forces. In 
that of the manifested Cosmos and our Earth it points to the rotation in 
the Cycles of Time of the world's axis and their equatorial belts ; the two 
lines forming the Svastica, meaning Spirit and Matter, the four hooks 
suggesting the motion in the revolving cycles, x^pplied to the Micro- 
cosm, Man, it shows him to be a link between Heaven and Earth, the 
right hand being raised of an horizontal arm the left pointing to the 
Earth. In the Sniaragdine Tablet of Hermes, the uplifted right hand is 
inscribed with the word ' Solve,' the left with the word ' Coagula.' It is 
at one and the same time an Alchemical, Cosmogonical, Anthropological 
and Magical sign, with seven keys to its inner meaning. It is not too 
much to say that the compound symbolism of this universal and most 
suggestive of signs, contains the key to the seven great mysteries of 
Kosmos. Born in mystical conception of the early Aryans, and by them 
placed at the verj^ threshold of Eternity, on the head of the serpent 
Anenta, it found its spiritual death in the Scholastic interpretations of 
mediaeval Anthropomorphists. It is the Alpha and Omega of universal 
Creative Force, evolving from pure Spirit and ending in gross Matter. 
It is also the key to the Cycle of Science, divine and human ; and he 
who comprehends its full meaning is forever liberated from the toils of 
Maha-Maya, the great Illusion and Deceiver. The Light that shines 
from under the Divine Hammer. Its more philosopical meaning will be 
better understood if the reader thinks carefully over the myth of Prome- 
theus. It is examined farther on, in the light of the Hindu Pramantha. 
Degraded into a purely physiological great symbol by some Orientalists) 
and taken in connection with terrestrial fire onlj^, their interpretation is 
an insult to every religion, including Christianity, whose greatest mys- 
tery is thus dragged down into Matter. The ' friction ' of Divine 
Pramantha and Arani could suggest itself under the image onl}' to the 
brutal conceptions of the German Materialists — than whom there are 
none w^orse. It is true that the Divine Babe, Agni with the Sanskrit 
speaking Race who became Ignis with the Latins, is born from the con- 
junction of Pramantha and Arani — the Svastica — during the sacrificial 
ceremony. But what of that ? Tvashtri (Vishvakarman) is the ' divine 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 289 

artist ' 2.nd carpenter (' The father of the fire '), and is also the Father of 
the Gods, and ' Creative Fire ' in the Vedas. So ancient is the symbol 
and so sacred, that there is hardly an excavation made on the sites of old 
cities without its being found. A number of such terra cotta discs called 
fusatoles, were found by Dr. Schlieman under the ruins of ancient Tro)^ 
Some of these were excavated in great abundance ; their presence being 
one more proof that the ancient Trojans and their ancestors were pure 
Aryans." 

In every country throughout the world I have seen both the Cross 
and the Swastica carved upon the walls of the tombs, temples and 
gopuras and in man^^ of the illustrations of this work you will have 
occular demonstration of this fact. Look particularly at the picture of 
Medinet Habu, where a group of native bo3^s are standing before this 
temple, and just above the head of the third boy on the left, upon the 
wall, you will see very plainly the Crnx Ansata cut into the hard stone. 
On the opposite side of the opening 3rou will find another on a level with 
the first one. This cross is purely an Egyptian Symbol and is to be 
found upon nearly every tomb and temple throughout the whole of the 
valley of the Nile as well as those of Nubia. If 3'ou examine it carefully 
you will find that it is a cross with a circle on top, or rather a tail cross 
surmounted with an oval, which is known as the Crux Ansata. We find 
it nearly always borne in the hands of the ancient Eg3'ptian Deities. 
This cross when entwined b3' a serpent is emblematic of Immortalit3' and 
the cross singly was looked upon as the S3fmbol of Life or the procreative 
forces, crowned with the oval it represented Life Eternal. 



IHummificatiott— Cvattsmicjration— MC'Ettfarnatiott» 



291 



"Chen came they forth, from that which now might seem 

H gorgeous grave; through portals sculptured deep, 

Slith imagery beautiful as dreams, 

Chey went, and left the shades which tend on sleep 

Over its unregarded dead to hecp 

Cheir silent watch. . . . 

Chen there came temples, such as mortal hand 

Bas never built; nor ecstacy, nor dream. 

Reared in the cities of enchanted land. 

— Shelley. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 298 



CHAPTER XIII. 

MUMMIFICATION— TRANSMIGRATION— RE-INCARNATION. 



(bTHE 



HE natural tenderness felt by men for the bodies of those endeared 
eJ_|_ to them, as well as the necessity of putting away from sight, or 
contact, objects which rapidly become offensive, in all ages has led to 
some disposition of the dead, by which these ends could be effected. 
Funeral rites have, in all ages, been interwoven with and consecrated 
by ceremonies. Portions of these rites have often survived the peo- 
ple and the religion to which they owed their origin. The Masonic 
student seeking for " More Light " is continually discovering the 
intimate relation between the manners and customs of the pagan philoso- 
phers of a prehistoric age and those practiced in the present day by 
the Christian Churches throughout the world universal. 

The poet Virgil speaks of a peculiar mythological doctrine which 
declares that unless dust is sprinkled three times on a dead bod}-, 
the soul, which had left its earthly temple, must wander for a thousand 
years on this side of the river Styx before Charon would admit him 
to his mysterious bark and ferry him to the gates of Hades. In the 
Christian Churches this peculiar ceremony is still performed at the 
burial of our dead, and the three-fold sprinkling upon the coffin, 
accompanied by the Avords, " Dust to dust, ashes to ashes," is most 
assuredly a custom that we have adopted from the pagan philosophers 
in a far-away past, long centuries before the Christian era had dawned, 
or Christ came upon the earth. 

Four methods iu times past have been employed in different 
countries for the disposition of the dead, which were as follows : Incin- 
eration, Mummification, Exposure, and Interment. I will describe 
these methods so that you may be enabled to have a general idea 
regarding the manner of disposing of the dead by various nations, and 
shall speak of them from my own personal observations throughout 



294 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

the world, obtained from the most reliable information and from various 
authorities. 

The Hebrews generally buried their dead in cemeteries invariably 
situated outside the walls of their cities ; yet, from a passage in Isaiah, 
chapter 30, and verse 33, it would seem that incineration was likewise 
practiced. Among the Greeks, in historical times, the bodies of the 
dead were indifferently interred or burned, a common word being used 
for either method. When the body was not burned it was placed in 
a coffin made of baked cla}' or earthenware and buried outside the 
town. Intramural interment was forbidden through the belief that the 
presence of the dead brought pollution to the living. If the cere- 
mony was that of burning, the body was placed upon a pyre of wood, to 
which fire was communicated in the presence of those who had attended 
the funeral. When the flames v/ere extinguished, the bones were col- 
lected and placed in urns made of various materials. These were pre- 
served in tombs, built expressly for the purpose, on the road-side, just 
outside the city gates. After the funeral of the deceased, those who 
assisted at the disposal of the body partook of a feast, at the house of the 
nearest relative, whose dut}- it was to attend the funeral ceremonies, 
which, if neglected, subjected him to very grave accusations. 

At Athens the period of mourning continued for thirty days, during 
which time feasts and sacrifices were celebrated. In the early part of the 
Republic, the Romans generally buried their dead, though burning 
was likewise practiced. Sylla appears to have been the first of his 
£'e}is who was burned. Under the empire, burning became customary 
until subverted by the gradual spread of Christianity, and at the end of 
the fourth century it had again fallen into general disuse. The funeral 
rites varied, not only with the wealth of the deceased, but somewhat, too, 
in periods of the commonwealth. In the latter days of the Roman 
Republic, under the earlier emperors, the corpse of a man of wealth was 
washed, anointed with oil and perfumed by the slaves of the undertaker. 
The body was then dressed in the best clothes it had possessed when 
living, placed with the feet toward the door in the vestibule, upon a 
couch covered with flowers, a branch of cypress being placed before the 
door, and a coin put in the mouth of the corpse to pay the ferriage into 
Hades. 




'^ 







CO 

X 

< 

o 

L±J 



3 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 295 

The funeral took place at niglit, tlie procession being headed by- 
musicians, followed by hired mourners singing funeral songs ; after these 
came the freedmen, wearing the cap of liberty. Immediately preceding 
the corpse were persons bearing masks made of wax, representing the 
ancestry of the deceased. The couch was borne by freedmen, or near 
relatives, the family following after ; the men, contrary to custom, with 
heads covered ; the women, with heads bare and hair disheveled, often 
beating their breasts and uttering piercing cries. Finally the corpse, 
with the couch upon which it was borne, was placed upon the funeral 
pyre, built in the form of an altar. The nearest relatives, with averted 
faces, kindled the fire, while perfumes, oils and articles of food were 
frequently thrown upon the body as it was being consumed. When the 
pyre was burned down, the embers were extinguished with wine, the 
bones and ashes sprinkled with perfume, and carefully collected by the 
nearest of kin, were then placed in an urn and buried in sepulchres com- 
mon to those of the same family. After the funeral, mourning sacrifices 
were continued for nine days, though by the women, on the death of a 
husband, or father, mourning was sometimes worn for a year. 

As the Christian religion gradually obtained the ascendancy a 
corresponding change took place in the mode of disposing of the dead. 
Bodies were no longer burned, but were interred and the offices of the 
Church were substituted for the rites of paganism. At a very early date 
it became customary to bury the dead in the immediate neighborhood of 
the churches, which, in large towns, led to scenes most shocking to the 
feelings of the community, while the disengagement of the gases, result- 
ing from their decomposition, proved deleterious to the general health. 
In London some churchyards raised over four feet in a few years. 
Within thirty years there had been interred within a space not exceeding 
three hundred and eighteen acres, one million five hundred thousand. 
(Report of the General Board of Health, London, 1S50). 

The period taken by a body to decay, after inhumation, varies 
according to climate, soil and the covering in which it is enveloped. 
Orfila and Lesueur, in their experiments, found nothing but the skeletons 
of bodies that had been buried from eighteen months to two years ; but 
this time is unusually short. Low, damp, moist grounds are best to 
hasten decomposition, especially if water percolates through. 



296 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

The Parsees of Bombay, India, dispose of tBeir dead by placing 
them upon iron gratings on the tops of high towers, called " Towers of 
Silence," built expressly for the purpose of exposing their dead to the 
approach of numberless vultures. These devour the body within an bour 
after if has been left alone, leaving nothing but the bones, which are 
thrown into a deep well in the centre of the tower, where they are left to 
decay. This receptacle for the remains is common to all, rich and poor, 
no distinctions being made. This method of disposing of the dead was 
adopted by these people because deemed by them as the most appropriate 
for this reason : They believe the Earth to be the Mother of Mankind, the 
producer of the fruits of the field, that source from whence comes plant 
life for the sustenance of not only man but his domestic animals. They 
therefore considered it a defilement and a injury to the Earth to bury 
their dead within its sacred depths, in consequence of which they exposed 
them on the tops of these high towers and to the birds of the air. Fire 
was considered too pure and sacred to use for burning the body ; like 
the Hindu, they considered exposure the best manner of disposing 
of their dead. 

I do not wish to dwell too long upon the various methods adopted 
by different people of the world in the disposal of their dead, or to tire 
you, my dear Brothers, with a too lengthy article upon this subject, but 
shall confine my remarks especially to the Egyptian Mummy. It would 
have given me very great pleasure to have described the mummies and 
mummification of this American continent, but time and space will not 
permit my doing so. I will say, however, that I do firmly believe the 
religious ideas of the ancient Egyptians and the Incas of prehistoric 
times to have been identical. 

Vestiges of an ancient Inca civilization are to be found to-day on the 
shores of Lake Titicaca. The tombs of the people who inhabited this 
country have been forcibly broken into and desecrated by miserable grave 
robbers, the ancient mummies taken from their sepulchres and ^ broken 
into pieces, which they scattered over the ground in an endeavor to 
rob the dead of their eyes and the ornaments with which they were 
decorated. 

Father Acosta says, in the sixth chapter " Royal Commentaries of 
the Inca," 1-92, that "these mummies were well preserved, with eyes 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 297 

that were made of pellets of gold, so well imitated that no one could 
have missed the real ones." 

The following seems to have been the usual method adopted after 
death by the Ancient Egyptians : When a person of any consequence 
died the women of the family, as well as all the female relatives, smeared 
their faces and daubed their heads with mud, and going forth from their 
dead into the streets, with their bosoms bare and their clothing sus- 
pended from their waists, wandered through the city, all the time 
beating their bosoms with loud lamentations and loudl}' bewailing their 
loss. The male members of the family would gather together, their 
clothing arranged in a similar manner, and perform the same methods of 
flagellation, accompanied with loud cries and lamentations. These scenes 
are pictured in many of the tombs showing funeral processions with the 
mourners beating their breasts and throwing dust upon their heads. 

The corpse of the male was at once committed to the care of the 
embalmers ; but if it was a female it was retained at home until decom- 
position had begun. It was then, like the male, committed into the 
charge of the embalmers. 

Herodotus says, in Q\idJ^-Euterpe 89, " The wives of men of rank are 
not given to be embalmed immediately after death, nor are indeed any of 
the more beautiful or valued women. It is not till they have been dead 
three or four days that they are carried to the embalmers. This is done 
to prevent indignities being offered them. It is said that once a case of 
this kind occurred, the man being detected by the information of his 
fellow-workmen . ' ' 

After the body had been surrendered to the embalmers it was dis- 
robed, when the principal embalmer, called a Scribe^ drew a line with a 
reed pen down the left side, from the sternum across the ribs. Following 
this line a paraschite or flank incisor made a deep incjision, and just as 
soon as it was made the operator would be driven away from the body by 
the people, who stoned, assaulted and cursed him, these paraschites being 
held in perfect abhorrence and dread. If any one should happen to come 
in contact with them they would be considered to be defiled, and one con- 
taminated by their touch would immediately have to be purified, by 
certain ceremonies in their temples, performed by their priest, in order to 
purify them, that they might again mingle with friends and companions. 



298 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

After the incision had been made another kind of embalmer called a 
Taricheiite would then proceed to extract the entrails, which, according to 
Herodotus, were afterwards washed in palm wine and thoroughly cleansed, 
when they were put through different processes for their preservation, 
which, on being finished, were placed in canopic jars and dedicated to the 
gods of the underworld, representing the four cardinal points of the 
universe: ist, Mestha^ or Amset ; 2d, Hapi ; 3d, Taimiautef ; and 4th, 
Qtiebhsejtmif. They received these names from the Ancient Egyptians 
who placed the viscera into jars because they thoroughly believed that it 
was necessary to have the whole of the body in the judgment of the dead, 
and if these jars did not contain the viscera of the deceased they were 
supposed to do so. 

These four jars have each a different head, representing the separate 
gods, and are as follows : Mestha is human-headed, representing the South, 
and the jar of this god was supposed to contain the stomach and larger 
intestines. Hapi was dog-headed, and representing the North, and it was 
supposed to contain the small intestines. Taumautef was jackal-headed, 
representing the East, and was supposed to contain the lungs and the 
heart. Quebhsennuf is hawk-headed, representing the West, and is sup- 
posed to contain the liver and gall-bladder. These four jars were placed 
in canopic chests, or boxes, about two feet square, divided into four com- 
partments of equal size, and in each space was placed one of the canopic 
jars that stood upright in the compartment to which it was allotted. 

The earliest record of canopic jars occurs during the eighteenth 
dynasty, during which period these jars were made of alabaster, arragonite 
and a variety of beautiful stone. They were in many instances most 
magnificent and exquisite specimens of Egyptian Art. I have said above 
that these jars were sttpposed to contain the various interior organs of the 
human body, because both Porphyry and Plutarch claim that the viscera, 
when removed from the body, was cast into the Nile ; but Mr. Pettigrew 
having received one chest for examination, which he opened, claims to 
have found the different jars used for the purpose as above described. 

I myself firmly believe that the interior organs of the body were 
embalmed, preserved and kept for this reason : The ancient Egyptians 
most assuredly believed that the interior organs of the body exerted an 
influence upon every thought and act of a man's life, affecting not only 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 299 

tis morality and virtue, but that they had a general tendency to lead into 
the downward path of vice and miser}^. In consequence they laid the 
blame for all the evil acts committed during the whole course of the 
man's life, as well as his evil thoughts, upon the viscera. Therefore, if 
the man was to be judged according to his every act and thought through 
life, all parts of the body should be there to undergo the examination, 
and whatever was adjudged to the body should also be adjudged to the 
various organs that made him either virtuous or immoral, and ought to be 
there with the body as testimony to the Truth of the Judgment. Budge 
states "that when the intestines were not buried in jars they were 
returned to the bod}^, and figures of Mcstlia^ Hapi, Taumaidef and 
Qucbliscnniif made of wax, sheet silver, gold, or porcelain were laid upon 
the parts these gods were supposed to protect," and y&X. Porphyry states 
that the viscera, after having been extracted, were laid in a box or chest 
and one of the embalmers would hold it up toward the sun, accompanied 
by the following invocation : " O sun, and all ye Gods, who give life to 
man, receive me, and give me to dwell along with the immortal Gods, for 
I have ever reverenced the Gods whom my parents taught me, and have 
honored the authors of my body ; of other men I have neither killed any 
one nor deprived him of a deposit, nor have done any other grievous 
wrong. And if, throughout my life, I have committed any sin in eating 
or drinking, I have not done it on my own account, but on account of 
these, pointing to the chest containing the viscera, which was then thrown 
into the river and the bod3% as pure, submitted to embalmment." But 
this is clearl}^ disproven by the fact that canopic jars have been 
found in immense quantities, containing the intestines of numberless 
bodies, as well as in finding the interior organs within the bodies of a vast 
majorit}- of the mummies discovered throughout the Nile valley, demon- 
strating that the statement of Porphyry, only so far as the invocation is 
concerned, is not to be relied upon. 

After the intestines had been removed, another Tarischeicte extracted 
the brain, using a crooked instrument, made expressl}^ for the purpose, 
with which to draw the brain down through the nasal cavities, after 
which the body was considered read}^ for the various salts and spices that 
were to be incorporated in all parts of it, necessar}^ for its preservation. 
Further operations for the completion of the process of embalming 



300 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

depended in a great measure upon the amount paid for its decorations 
and preservation. Three methods prevailed for the purpose of embalm- 
ing the bodies of the dead in Egypt. 

The first was attainable only by the rich, the process being as 
follows : After the entrails, brains, etc., had been removed certain gums, 
spices and fluids were passed through the nostrils up into the hollow of 
the skull. The cavities of the chest and stomach were then thoroughly 
washed with palm wine, then filled with resins, gums and many now 
unknown substances, the incision made b}- the Paraschite being then 
closed up. The body was steeped in a bath, composed of carbonate of 
soda and other alkalies, for a period of seventy days ; it was then taken 
from the bath and permitted to dry, after which they wrapped it in from 
eight hundred to one thousand yards of linen bandages, cemented 
together by gums and costl}' aromatics, which effectually preserved the 
body from deca3^ Its outer covering, or mask, was beautifully decorated 
with gold and silver leaf and artistically painted in many colors. It 
was then placed in a series of cases, the one fitting into the other. 
This completed the process adopted in the embalming of the bodies of the 
most wealthy and cost about three thousand five hundred dollars of our 
money, or one silver talent of theirs. 

The second method consisted in removing the entrails, etc., injecting 
the cavities with cedar oil and soaking the body in natron for seventy 
days. It was then bandaged as above, inclosed in mask and outer 
covering and coffin. This method cost about one thousand two hundred 
dollars in our money, or a mena in theirs. 

The third process was for the poorer classes and consisted in remov- 
ing the brains and viscera. It was then washed in the sap of a small 
tree growing in Arabia and Nubia, the juices of which were called myrrh. 
The body was then soaked in a saline bath for the usual seventy days, 
when it was dried and covered with linen bandages and mask. It was 
then decorated and put in a coffin or case. This mode of embalming 
cost about five hundred dollars. 

When the bodies were prepared, or embalmed, they were often kept 
for a long time at home, being very frequently produced at festivals or 
banquets to recall to the guests the fact " that in life the}^ were in the 
midst of death" and all the joys of life were but transient. 




TOMBS OF THE MAMELUKES, 

CAIRO. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 301 

Kenrick in his "Ancient Egyptians,'' Vol. II., page 48, says: "By 
a singular law passed, at a time when there was a great want of circu- 
lating medium (quoting from Herodotus), a man was allowed to pledge 
the mummies of his forefathers for debt, but was himself deprived of 
sepulture if he failed to redeem them before his death. The prohibition 
appears to have included his descendants as long as the debt remained 
unpaid." 

Herodotus also related another peculiar custom, which was, when- 
ever any Egyptian or foreigner lost his life through falling prey to a 
crocodile, or by drowning in the river, the law compelled the inhabitants 
of the city near which the body is cast up to have it embalmed and to 
bury it in one of the sacred repositories with all possible magnificence. 
No one may touch the corpse, not even any of the friends or relations, 
but only the priests of the Nile who prepare it for burial, with their own 
hands — regarding it as something more than the mere body of a man — 
and themselves lay it in the tomb. 

The art of embalming reached its perfection during the eighteenth 
and nineteenth dynasties, or about the time of Thothmes III. to Rameses 
II. For a long time the dead were embalmed by compulsor}^ law, so that 
rich and poor alike, whether at private or public expense, were submitted 
to the process, and it has been estimated by Rawlinson that " the annual 
expense of embalming in Egypt must have been not less than seventy- 
five million dollars." 

The first mummy that was removed from this country and taken to 
England was in 1722, and quite a number were placed in the British 
Museum in 1803. These mummies are most interesting objects of study 
to all who desire knowledge of the remote and wonderful civilization of 
ancient Egypt. Mummification became one of the lost arts about A. D. 
700, having continued for nearly four thousand years,, and who can tell 
how^ long before that time ? 

The oldest mummy in the world, about whose antiquity there is no 
doubt, is that of Seker-em-sa-f, son of Pepi First, and elder brother of Pepi 
Second B. c. 3,200, was fotmd at Sakkarah in 1881, and is now at Gizeh. 
The lower jaw is wanting and one of the legs have been dislocated in 
transporting, the features being well preserved and on the right side of 
the head is the lock of hair emblematic of youth. An examination of the 



302 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

body shows that Seker-em-sa-f died very young. A number of bandages 
found in the chamber of his pyramid at Sakkarah are similar to those in 
use at a later date, and the mummy proves that the art of embalming had 
already arrived at a very high state of perfection in the Ancient Empire. 
The fragments of a body found by Col. Howard Vyse in the pyramid 
of Men-Kau-Ra (M3'cerinus) at Gizeh, are thought by some to belong to 
a much later period than that of this king. There appears, however, to 
be no warrant for this belief, as they belong to a man and not to a woman, 
as Vyse thought, and may quite easily be the remains of the mummy of 
Mycerinus. The skeletons found in sarcophagi belonging to the first six 
dynasties fall to dust when air is admitted to them and emit a slight smell 
of bitumen. 

ADDRESS TO A MUMMY OF THEBES. 

And thou hast walk'd about (how strange a story !) 
In Thebes streets three thousand j-ears ago, 

When the Memnoniuni was in all its glory, 
And time had not begun to overthrow 

Those temples, palaces, and piles stupendous 

Of which the very ruins are tremendous ! 

Speak ! for thou long enough has acted dummy ; 

Thou hast a tongue — come - let us hear its tune ; 
Thou'rt standing on thy legs, above ground, mummy ! 

Revisiting the glimpses of the moon — 
Not like thin ghosts or disembodied creatures, 
But with thy bones, and flesh, and limbs, and features. 

Tell us — for doubtless thou canst recollect — 

To whom should we assign the sphinx's fame ? 

Was Cheops or Cephrenes architect 

Of either pyramid that bears his name ? 

Is Pompey's Pillar really a misnomer? 

Had Thebes a hundred gates, as sung bj^ Homer ? 

Perhaps thou wert a Mason, and forbidden 

By oath to tell the secrets of thj' trade — 

Then say what secret melody was hidden 

In Memnon's statue which at sunrise play'd? 

Perhaps thou wert a priest— if so my struggles 

Are vain, for priestcraft never owns its juggles. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 303 

Perhaps that very hand, now pinion'd flat, 

Has hob-a-nobbed with Pharaoh, glass to glass ; 

Or dropped a half-penny in Homer's hat, 

Or doff 'd thine own to let Queen Dido pass ; 

Or held, by Solomon's own invitation, 

A torch at the great temple's dedication. 

I need net ask thee if that hand, when arm'd 

Has an)' Roman soldier maul'd and knuckled ; 

For thou wert dead, and buried, and embalmed 
Ere Romulus and Remus had been suckled: 

Antiquity appears to have begun 

Long after thy primeval race was run. 

Thou could'st develop— if that withered tongue 

Might tell us what those sightless orbs have seen— 

How the world looked when it was fresh and 3'oung : 
And the great deluge still had left it green. 

Or was it then so old that history's pages 

Contained no record of its ■ early ages ? 

Still silent ? Incommunicative elf. 

Art sworn to secrecy ? then keep thy vows ; 

But prithee tell us something of thyself — 
Reveal the secrets of thy prison house ; 

Since in the world of spirits thou hast slumbered 

What hast thou seen, what strange adventures numbered? 

Since first thy form was in this box extended 

We have above ground seen some strange mutations ; 

The Roman empire has begun and ended — 

New worlds have risen — we have lost old nations. 

And countless kings have into dust been humbled. 

While not a fragment of thy flesh has crumbled. 

Didst thou not hear the pother o'er th}' head 

When the great Persian conqueror Canibyses 
Marched armies o'er thy tomb with thundering tread — 

O'erthrew Osiris, Orus, Apis, Isis, 
And shook the pj^ramids with fear and wonder, 
When the gigantic Memnon fell asunder? 



304 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

If the tomb's secrets may not be confessed, 

The nature of thy private life unfold ; 
A heart has throbbed beneath that leathern breast, 

And tears adown that dusky cheek have roll'd ; 
Have children climb' d those knees and kissed that face ? 
What was thy name and station, age and race ? 

Statue of flesh ! Immortal of the dead ! 

Imperishable type of evanescence ! 
Posthumous man — who quittest thy narrow bed 

And standest, undecayed, within our presence ! 
Thou wilt hear nothing till the judgment morning, 
When the great trumpet shall thrill thee with its warning. 

Why should this worthless tegument endure. 

If its undying quest be lost forever ? 
Oh ! let us keep the soul embalmed and pure 

In living virtue — that when both must sever. 
Although corruption may our frame consume. 
The Immortal spirit in the skies may bloom. 

Horace Smith. 

Mummifes of the eleventh dynasty are usually very poorly made ; 
they are 3^ellowish in color, brittle to the touch, and fall to pieces very 
easily. The limbs are rarely bandaged separately and the body, having 
been wrapped carelessly in a number of folded cloths, is covered over 
lengthwise by one large linen sheet. On the little finger of the left hand 
a scarab is usually found, but besides this there is neither amulet nor 
ornament. The coffins of the mummies of this period are often found 
filled with baskets, tools, mirrors, bows and arrows, etc., etc. From the 
thirteenth to the seventeenth dynasties, also, mummies were made in such 
a manner as to perish rapidly. From the eighteenth to the twenty-first 
dynasties the mummies of Memphis are black, and so dry that they fall 
to pieces at the slightest touch ; the cavity of the breast is filled with 
amulets of all kinds, and the green stone inscribed with the thirtieth 
chapter of the Book of the Dead placed over the heart. 

At Thebes, during this period, the mummies are yellow in color and 
slightly polished, the nails of the hands and feet retain their places and 
are stained with henna. The limbs bend in all directions, without break- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 305 

ing, and the art of dainty bandaging attained its greatest perfection. 
The left hand wears rings and scarabs, and chapters of the Book of the 
Dead are found in the cofiEns, either by the side of the mummy or be- 
neath it. After the twenty-first dynasty the custom arose of placing the 
mummy in a cartonnage, sewn or laced up the back, and painted in bril- 
liant colors, with scenes of the deceased adorning the gods and the like. 
In the period between the twenty-sixth dynasty and the conquest of 
Egypt by Alexander the decoration of mummies reached its highest point, 
and the ornamentation of the cartonnage shows the influence of the art of 
Greece upon that of Egypt. The head of the mummy is put into a mask, 
gilded or painted in bright colors, the cartonnage fits the body very 
closely and the feet are protected by a sheath. A large number of figures 
of the gods and of amulets are found on the mummy itself, and many 
things which formed its private property when alive were buried with it- 
Towards the time of the Ptolemies mummies become black and heavy ; 
bandages and body are made by bitumen into one solid mass, which can 
only be properly examined by the aid of a hatchet. About b. c. ioo 
mummies were very carefully bandaged, each limb being treated sepa- 
rately and retained its natural shape after treatment, and the features of 
the face, somewhat blunted, are to be distinguished beneath the bandages. 

At the commencement of the Christian era mummification began to 
decline, as the process degenerated through neglect, and the art became 
lost in the seventh century. If we wish to understand the reason for 
embalming of the dead by ancient Egyptians, we must first come to a 
realization of what their conception was of man himself, while living. In 
order that my readers may be enabled to thoroughly understand this sub- 
ject I shall quote from various authors, and give my own impressions, 
gleaned from personal investigation of the religions and philosophies of 
the far East. 

Maspero tells us in " Egyptian Archaeology," page io8, that " The 
Egyptians regarded man as composed of various different entities, each 
having its separate life and functions. First there was the body, then 
the Ka, or double, which was a less solid duplicate of the corporeal form 
— a colored but ethereal projection of the individual, reproducing feature 
for feature. The double of a child was a child ; the double of a woman 
-was a woman ; the double of a man was a man. 
20 



306 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

"After the double {Ka) came the soul {Bi or Ba) which was properly 
imagined and represented as a bird ; after the soul came the ' R'hoo ' 
or ' the Luniinous,' a spark from the fire divine. None of these ele- 
ments were in their nature imperishable. Left to themselves they would 
hasten to dissolution and the man would then die a second time ; that is 
to say, annihilated. The piety of the survivors found means, however, 
to avert this catastrophe. By the process of embalmment they could for 
ages suspend the decomposition of the body ; while by means of prayers 
and offerings they saved the Double, the soul, and the ' Luminous ' 
from the second death and secured to them all that was necessary for 
the prolongation of their existence. 

'' The Double never left the place where the mummy reposed ; but 
the soul and the ' Kltoo^ went forth to follow the gods. They, however, 
kept perpetually returning, like travellers who come home after an ab- 
sence. The tomb was therefore a dwelling-house, the ' Eternal House ' 
of the dead, compared with which the houses of the living were but 
wayside inns. These ' Eternal Houses ' Avere built after a plan which 
exactly corresponded to the Egyptian idea of the after life. The ' Eternal 
Houses ' must always include the private rooms of the Soul, which were 
closed on the day of burial and which no living being could enter with- 
out being guilty of sacrilege. It must also contain the reception rooms 
of the Double, where priests and friends brought their wishes and 
offerings." 

This same author also states, in his " Ancient Egypt and Assyria," 
that " The soul does not die at the same time that the breath expires upon 
the lips of man ; it survives, but with a precarious life, of which the dura- 
tion depends upon that of the corpse and is measured by it. Whilst it 
decays the soul perishes at the same time ; it loses consciousness and 
gradually loses substance too, tintil nothing but an unconscious, empty 
form remains, which is finally effaced, when no traces of the skeleton are 
left. Such an existence is agony, uselessly prolonged, and to deliver 
the double from it the flesh must be rendered incorruptible. This is at- 
tained by embalming it as a nnimmy. Like every act that is useful to 
man, this one is of Divine origin." 

The Ancient Egyptian belief in regard to a future life was that 
when death came the soul did not leave the bod}^ immediatel3^ but con- 




TOMB AND MOSQUE OF KAIT BEY, 

CAIRO. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 30T 

tinned with it nntil decay set in and if they could preserve the body by 
embalmment and prevent its decay the soul would then remain with it in 
a conscious state of existence. It was, therefore, with the greatest care 
they hastened to preserve the bodies of their dead in order to keep the 
soul within the dwelling-place prepared for it, the tomb. They gave a 
great deal more time and attention to building houses for the dead than 
to those for the living, because they believed houses occupied during 
life to be merely temporary dwelling places ; but the tomb, wherein the 
mummied dead were laid, had apartments where friends could come on a 
visit and bring funeral offerings of all kinds to the deceased, seemingly 
at home, as it were, receiving his relations and friends. I have already 
described the custom in a previous chapter of this work. 

A great many writers claim that the Ancient Egyptians believed in 
the Transmigration of souls, positively claiming they were the iirst peo- 
ple who declared that man possessed an immortal soul and taught that 
after the body decayed the soul would re-incarnate into a lower animal 
and thread itself through all terrestrial and marine animals, as well as 
birds ; but after it had functioned through all these variant forms it 
would be re-born again as man, and that it would take no less than 
three thousand years in order to accomplish this cycle or round of Trans- 
migration. Now in respect to Transmigration I do not think, for one 
moment, that the Initiates of the Ancient Egyptian Mysteries ever be- 
lieved in the transmigration of souls, as generally understood by the 
profane in those days. In his wonderful allegory, Virgil shows a law of 
progression according to Natui^e's higher law, for he unfolds to us the 
doctrines as taught in the Mysteries, wherein he demonstrates that the 
most ancient philosophers believed in the existence of a primal source 
from which these souls emanated. That they were sparks from the Divine 
Fire, a part of that Divine Essence, which vivifies every star glittering 
in the iniinitude of space and cycles along their allotted paths through- 
out the Kosmos, with the threefold purification of Fire, Water, and Air 
representing the Protean appearance employed by the Eternal Pilgrim 
in functioning through Nature's evolutionary processes, until it was 
made manifest in Man. In this way we are enabled to know that 
" Man is certainly )io special creation, and that he is the product of Na- 
ture's gradual perfective work, like any other living unit of this earth. 



308 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

But this is ouly so with regard to the human tabernacle. That which 
lives and thinks in man, and survives that frame, the masterpiece of 
evolution, is the ' Eternal Pilgrim,' the Protean differentiation in Space 
and Time of the One Absolute Unknowable " (" Secret Doctrine," Vol. 
II, page 728). 

We have functioned all through the variant forms of Life and have 
wriggled and squirmed with the snake, and we have roamed, four-footed 
and fanged, through the forest and jungles and have left all that went 
with it behind us, yet we carry upon our tongue a venom far more 
deadly than the virus of the snake. Although the tiger's claws are gone 
and the fangs have been lost to us, yet we of to-day have claws far more 
treacherous and dangerous than the wolf or tiger, intensified for harm 
by having been humanized, more deadly than all the beasts of the jungle 
or forest. 

The tiger and other wild beasts seek and kill their prey for food, 
as their very existence depends on killing weaker animals. But man is 
to be dreaded far more than other animals. I am under the opinion that 
those learned men, those Hierophants, esoterically who believe that 
according to the life a man has lived he would be reborn, with all the 
attributes of the various animals, such as the cunning of the Fox, the 
ferocity of the Tiger, etc., but that he would never re-appear again in a 
lower organism, for they thoroughly understood there is no retrogression 
in Nature and that all virbrates with progressive force and energy 
through myriads of successive births. We come, we go, each time 
ascending a step above the other, mounting the ladder of evolution, 
gaining experience on every rung and intertwined with the whole of 
■organic and inorganic being, through which we have passed. 

We climb the cycling path of evolution, from Infusoria to Protozoa, 
to Man. Step by step we advance through all the manifestations and 
diiferentiations in Nature's evolutionary processes, from primordial matter 
to humanity. Through ages innumerable we pass through variant forms 
in the varying kingdoms, and see our kith and kin on every hand. 
There is not only a relationship existing between the Macrocosm and 
the Microcosm, but a separate and intimate interrelation and interaction 
exists between their separate parts. Nature proclaims this grand and 
glorious Truth in our pre-natal experience, when the Microcosm of 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 309 

the individual demonstrates to us in miniature the Macrocosm of the 
Race. 

During the gestative period, previous to birth, when first the proto- 
plasm surrounds the germ and sets in vibration the life forces contained 
in its protoplasmic essence, causing our Proteus to vibrate through all 
the differentiations of Life, in his onward march through Nature's evolu- 
tionary processes, and clothes himself in all the various garments in 
nature's wardrobe in his long passage through the variant forms of life 
before he assumes the human embryo ; he is continually changing in his 
progression to Man, passing through the various stages, from cell to 
infusora, worm, reptile, fish, including gills, quadruped, including tail ; 
ever changing, until the mental development begins, then the caudal 
appendage commences to shorten and finally disappears and the embryo 
passes on to the human plane of development. During this period the 
embryo man demonstrates the evolution of the human race, througli ages 
innumerable the human family came into the life of the world. From 
each germ-plasm of human being comes forth anew the life of the race ; 
it goes through the same round as the species, and the life of the babe 
has repeated the evolutionary experience of mankind. 

Mr. A. P. Sinnett, in " Transactions of the London Lodge of the 
Theosophical Society," No. 7, October, 1SS5, says: "That the human 
soul, once launched on the streams of evolutioia, as a human individu- 
ality, passes through alternate periods of physical, and relatively spiritual 
existence. It passes from the one plane, or stratum, or condition of 
nature to the other, under the guidance of its Karmic affinities ; living- 
in incarnations the life which its Karma has preordained ; modifying its 
progress within the limitations of circumstances, and, — developing fresh 
Karma bj^ its use or abuse of opportunities." 

Now I firmly believe that the Ancient Egyptian Hierophants 
thoroughly understood this fact of the birth and immortality of the Soul 
as well as the re-incarnation of the Spirit and that once the Human Monad 
had demonstrated its individuality, b}^ incarnating as a human indivi- 
dual, it could not pass back again, after the death of the human, by any 
see-saw process, into a lower animal organization, for there is no retro- 
gression in Nature. There is a deal of difference between the human 
and the brute. In the former dwells the Manasaputras. 



810 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

" 'J'/if Sons of Ml lid" tluit have been through Uio long drifting ages, 
niakiug a home for the reception of the Monad manifesting in the 
httman kingdom and when once this " Mind-born Thinker" has mani- 
fested itself in man it could not under any circumstances go back and 
reincarnate in a hnvcr animal, any mure than it could return again in its 
molecular form, inti) the wonili of its mother. The "Eternal Pilgrim" 
has, in its long journey through cycling ages, been waiting for the 
development of the perfect human body that was to become its home or 
dwelling-place, which, through mj'riads of years, had been developing for 
that especial purpose ; but the animal as yet is not read}^ to receive this 
Il/aiiasir riitilw it is not yet ready to become the habitation of the 
re-incarnating I*!gi\ the Divine Thinker. 

Involution is a continual cycling progress, ever upward and onward, 
to higher planes of Spiritual unl\ildnient, but never backward; the animal 
is on a lower plane, and they are not ready to become the habitation of 
the " Sons of Mind," but are on the ascending cycle that will eventually 
bring them, through the law of evolution, to become the home of the 
Hnnuin Monad or " the INlonail manifesting in the human kingdom," the 
dM'elling place oi the Divine Thitiker. 

/;/ the 'J^(H>k of the Dead mc find the soul of disembodied man 
announcing the victory of the soul over death, and that he lives in his 
spiril!tal body after dissolution. See 17: 22: "O ye who make the 
escort of the God, stretch out to me your arms, for I become one of you." 
Again, in 26: 5-6: "I open heaven; I do what was commanded in 
^lempliis ; T have knowledge of my heart ; 1 am in possession of my 
heart ; 1 am in possession of my arms ; I am in possession of ni}- legs, at 
the will of myself INIy soul is not imprisoned in ni}- body at the gates of 
Amenti," thus proving that, although the phj-sical body had disinte- 
grated, spiritual man continued to exist as a spiritual entity after death, 
because it is a part of the Divine Essence, the " Immutable and Unknow- 
able to our physical senses, but nuinifest and clearly perceptiblt^ to our 
spiritnal natures. Once imbued with that basic idea and the further con- 
ception that if it is Omnipresent, universal and eternal, like abstract Space 
itself, we must have emanated from it and must some da}' return to it." 

Now if this abstruse Metaphysical, Theosophical and Psychological 
doctrine be true, then the thorough comprehension of the rest becomes 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 311 

very eas}- to understand, and we shall begin to know that " Life and 
Death, good and evil, past and futnre," are all empty words, or, at best, 
figures of speech. If the objective universe itself is but a passing illu- 
sion, on account of its beginning and finitude, then both Life and Death 
must also be aspects and illusions. They are changes of state, in fact, 
and no more. Real life is in the Spiritual consciousness of that life^ in a 
conscious existence in Spirit., not Matter ; and real Death is the limited 
perception of life, the impossibility of sensing consciousness, or even 
individual existence outside of form, or, at least, of some form of 
matter. 

Those who sincerely reject the possibility of conscious life, divorced 
from matter and brain-substance, are dead units. The words of Paul, an 
Initiate, become comprehensible, " ye are dead and your life is hid with 
Christ in God," Col. 3 : 3, which is to saj' : Ye are pensonally dead 
matter, unconscious of its own spiritual essence, and your real life is 
hid with 3'our divine Ego (Christos) in, or merged with, God (Atman) ; 
" now has it departed from you, ye soulless people." Speaking on 
esoteric lines, every irrevocably materialistic person is a DEAD Man, a 
living automaton, in spite of his being endowed with great brain power. 
Listen to what Aryasanga says stating the same fact : 

" That which is neither Spirit nor Matter, neither Light nor Dark- 
ness, but is verily the container and root of these, that thou art. The 
Root projects at every dawn its shadow on ItsELF, and that shadow thou 
callest Light and Life, O poor dead Form (this) Life Light streameth 
downward through the stairway of the seven worlds, the stairs, of which 
each step becomes denser and darker. It is of this seven-times-seven 
scale that thou art the faithful climber and mirror, O, little man ! Thou 
art this, but thou knowest it not. 

" The higher triad Atnia — Buddhi — Manas, may be recognized from 
the first lines of the quotation from the Egyptian papyrus. In the Ritual., 
now the Book of tlie Dead., the purified soul, the dual Manas, appears as 
' the victim of the dark influence of the Dragon Apophis,' the physical 
personality of Kama-Rupic man, with his passions. If it has attained the 
final knowledge of the heavenly and infernal mysteries, the ' Gnosis ' — 
the divine and the terrestrial mysteries of White and Black Magic — then 
the defunct personality will triumph over its enemy " — Death. 



312 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

This alludes to the case of a complete reunion at the end of the earth 
life, of the lower Manas, full of the harvest of life with its Ego. But if 
Apophis conquers the soul then it cannot csca-pe a. second desith.. These 
few lines from a papyrus, nianj' thousands of 3'ears old, contain a whole 
revelation, known in those days only to the Hierophants and the Initiates. 
The " harvest of life consists of the finest spiritual thoughts, of the 
noblest and most unselfish deeds of the personality, and the constant 
presence during its bliss after death, of all those it loved with divine 
spiritual devotion." Sec Key to Thcosopliy, i^j^ ct scq. 

Remember the teaching : The human Soul, Lower Manas, is the ojily 
and direct mediator between the personality and the divine Ego. That 
which goes to make up on this earth \.\i.& personality^ miscalled individu- 
ality by the majority, is the sum of all its mental, physical and spiritual 
characteristics, which, being impressed on the human soul, produce 
the man. 

Now, of all these characteristics it is the purified thoughts alone 
which can be impressed on the higher, immortal Ego. This is done by 
the human soul merging again in its essence into its parent source, com- 
mingling with its divine Ego diiring life, and reuniting itself entirel}^ 
with it after -the death of the physical man. Therefore, unless Kama- 
Manas transmits to Buddhi-Manas such personal ideations and such 
consciousness of its / as can be assimilated b}^ the divine Ego, nothing of 
that /, or personalit}^ can survive in the Eternal. 

Only that which is worthy of the immortal God within us, and iden- 
tical in its nature with the divine quintessence, can survive ; for in this 
case it is its own, the divine Ego's " shadow " or emanations which 
ascend to it and are indrawn by it into itself again, to become once more 
part of its own Essence. No noble thought, no grand aspiration, desire, 
or divine, immortal love, can come into the brain of the man of claj- and 
settle there, except as a direct emanation from the highest to and through 
the lower Ego ; all the rest, intellectual as it may seem, proceed^ from 
the " shadow " the loiver mind, in its association and co-mingling with 
Kama, and passes away and disappears forever. But the mental and 
spiritual ideation of the personal " I " return to it as part of the Ego's 
essence, and never fade out. Thus of the personality that was, onl}' its 
spiritual experiences, the memory of all that is good and noble, with the 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 313 

consciousness of its " I '" blended with that of all the other personal " I's" 
that preceded it, survive and become immortal. 

There is no distinct or separate immortality for the men of earth 
outside the Ego which informed them. That Higher Ego is the sole 
bearer of all its a//cj- egos on earth and their sole representative in the 
mental state called Devachan. As the last embodied personalitj^, how- 
ever, has a right to its own special state of bliss, unalloyed and free from 
the memories of all others, it is the las/ life only xoliicli is fully and realis- 
/ica/Iy vivid. 

Devachan is often compared to the happiest day in a series of many 
thousands of other " days " in the life of a person. The intensity of its 
happiness makes the man entirely forget all others, his past becoming 
obliterated. This is what we call the Dcvaclianic State and the reward of 
the personality, and it is on this old idea that the haz_y Christian notion 
of Paradise was built, borrowed with man}' other things from the Egyp- 
tian M3'steries, wherein the doctrine was enacted. And this is the 
meaning of the passage quoted in " Isis Unveiled " The Soul has 
triumphed over Apophis, the Dragon of Flesh. Henceforth, the indi- 
viduality will live in eternity, in its highest and noblest elements, the 
memory of its past deeds, while the " characteristics " of the " Dragon " 
will be feeding out in Kama-Loca." 



gjixtcen ^abiours-ILost Enotolftrge. 



315 



One evening 368119 lingered in the market pUicc 
t^e.iehiiig the people of pAr.-bke of truth and grace, 
SIben in the aquare remote a crowd was seen to rfse, 
Hnd atop with loathing gestures and abhorring cries. 

Che Master and Ris meek disciples went to see 
ttlbat cause for this commotion and disgust could be, 
Hnd found a poor dead dog beside the gutter laid; 
Revolting sight! ?t which each face its bate betrayed. 

One held bis nose, one shut his eyes, one turned away; 
Hnd all among themselves beg.in aloud to say, — 
"Detested creature! he pollutes the earth and .lir!" 
" Ris eyes are blcir ! " " Ris ears are foul ! " " Rts ribs are bare!** 

"In .his torn hide there's not a decent shoe-string left!" 
" No doubt the execrable cur was hung for theft ! " 
■Chen 7e8us spake, and dropped on him this saving wreath, — 
"€ven pearls are dark before the whiteness of his teeth!" 

"Che pelting crowd grew silent and asK^med, like one 
Rebuked by sight of wisdom higher than his own; 
Hnd one exclaimed, " No creature so accursed can be. 
But some good thing in him a loving eye will see. 

— Front t)tc Persian. 



S16 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 317 



CHAPTER XIV. 

SIXTEEN SAVIOURS-LOST KNOWLEDGE. 

fHE profound philosophies taught in our beloved Ancient and 
Accepted Scottish Rite bodies of the Southern Jurisdiction were 
subjects for a discussion I held one day in San Francisco, California, with 
my friend and brother, the late C. M. Plumnier, of the " Trestle Board." 
During our conversation we drifted to the teachings of Buddha, Zoroaster 
Confucius, Pythagoras, Orpheus, Socrates and others. We soon found 
ourselves floundering in the depths of Christian Theology, Christ and 
Salvation, when Brother Plummer arose and walking to the shelves of his 
library, selected a copy of the "Trestle Board" — September, 1896. He 
■turned to page 423, and handing it to me, said : " My dear Doctor, you 
and I think very much alike along these Theosopbical, Philosophical and 
Metaphysical lines of thought, take this and read it and you will do me a 
personal favor by inserting it in your own work." I thanked him and 
read the article and give it to you verbatim ; it is called " The World's 
Saviours." 

" Many people have never heard of more than one Saviour and many 
more of no more than one crucifixion. Coming across an old book, 
recently, giving an account of no less than sixteen Saviours that have 
been crucified, we have compiled from it the following: They are named 
in the order of the prominence which they have attained by the number 
of their followers : 

" I. Chrishna, of India, b. c. 1200. Among the sin-atoning gods 
wbo condescended, in ancient times, to forsake the throne of heaven and 
descend upon the plains of India, through human birth, to suffer and die 
for the sins and transgressions of the human race, the eighth Avatar or 
Saviour, may be considered the most important and the most exalted 
character, as he had the most conspicuous life, and commanded the most 
devout and the most universal homage. And while some of the other 



318 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

incarnate demigods were invested with only a limited measure of tlie 
infinite deit3'-slaip, Clirishna, according to the teachings of their New 
Testament (the Ramazand), comprehended in himself 'a full measure of 
the Godhead bodily.' The evidence of his having been crucified is as 
conclusive as any other sacrificial or sin-atoning God whose name has 
been memorialized in history or embalmed as a sacred idol in the 
memories of his devoted worshippers. 

" Mr. Moore, an English traveler and writer, in a large collection of 
drawings taken from the Hindoo sculptures and monuments, which he 
arranged together in a work entitled ' The Hindoo Pantheon,' has repre- 
senting, suspended on the cross, the Hindoo crucified God and Son of 
God, ' our Lord and Saviour,' Chrishna, with holes pierced in his feet, 
evidently intended to represent the nail-holes made by the act of crucifix- 
ion. Mr. Higgins, who examined this work, which he found in the 
British Museum, makes report of a number of the transcript drawings, 
intended to represent the crucifixion of this oriental and mediatorial God, 
which we will here condense. 

"In plate 98 this Saviour is represented with a hole in the top of one 
foot, just above the toes, where the nail was inserted in the act of cruci- 
fixion. In another drawing he is represented exactly in the form of a 
Romish Christian crucifix, but not fixed or fastened to a tree, though the 
legs and feet are arranged in the usual way, with nail, holes in the latter. 
There is a halo of glory over it, emanating from the heavens above, just 
as we have seen Jesus Christ represented in a work by a Christian writer 
entitled ' Ouarles Emblems,' also in other Christian books. 

" In several of the icotis (drawings) there are marks of holes in both 
feet, and in others in the hands only. In the first drawing which he con- 
svilted the marks are very faint, so as to be scarcely visible. In figures 4 
and 5 of plate 11, the figures have nail-holes in both feet, while the hands 
are not represented. Figure 6 has on it the representation of a round 
hole in the side. To his collar or shirt hangs an emblem of a heart repre- 
sented in the same manner as those attached to the imaginary likenesses 
of Jesus Christ, which may now be found in some Christian countries. 
Figure 91 has a hole in one foot, a nail through the other and a round 
nail or pin mark in one hand onl}', while the other is ornamented with a 
dove and a serpent, both emblems of the deity in the Christian Bible. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 319 

" The history of Christian Zeus (or Jeseus, as some writers spell it), 
is contained principally in the Baghavat-Gita, the episode portion of the 
Mahabarat Bible. The book is believed to be divinely inspired, like all 
other Bibles, and the Hindoos claim for it an antiquity of six thousand 
years. Like Christ, he was of humble origin, and like him had to 
encounter opposition and persecution. But he seems to have been more 
successful in the propagation of his doctrine, for it is declared he soon 
became surrounded by many earnest followers and the people in vast 
multitudes followed him, crying aloud, ' This indeed is the Redeemer 
promised to our fathers ! ' 

" His pathway was thickl}^ strewn with miracles, which consisted in 
healing the sick, curing lepers, restoring the dumb, deaf and the blind, 
raising the dead, aiding the weak, comforting the sorrow stricken, relieving 
the oppressed, casting out devils, etc. He came not ostensibly to destroy 
the previous religion, but to purify it of its impurities and preach a better 
doctrine. He came, as he declared, 'to reject evil and restore the reign 
of good, and redeem man from the consequences of the fall, and deliver 
the oppressed earth from its load of sin and suffering.' His disciples 
believed him to be God himself, and millions worshipped him as such in 
the time of Alexand-er the Great, B. c. 330. 

" The hundreds of counterparts to the history of Christ, proving 
their histories to be almost identical, will be found enumerated in Chapter 
XXXII, such as: i. His miraculous birth by a virgin; 2. The mother 
and child being visited b}^ shepherds, wise men and the angelic host, 
who joyously sang, 'In thy delivery, O favored among women, all 
nations shall have cause to exult ; ' 3. The edict of the tyrant ruler 
Cansa, ordering all the first born to be put to death ; 4. The miraculous 
escape of the mother and child from his bloody decree by the parting of 
the waves of the River Jumna to permit them to pass through on dry 
ground; 5. The early retirement of Chrishna to a desert ; 6. His baptism 
or ablution in the River Ganges, corresponding to Christ's baptism in 
Jordan ; 7. His transfiguration at Madura, where he assured his disciples 
that present or absent I will always be with 3'ou ; 8. He had a favorite 
disciple (Arjoon), who was his bosom friend, as John was Christ's ; 9. 
He was anointed with oil by women, like Christ; 10. A somewhat 
similar story is told of him — his disciples being enabled b}^ him to calch 



320 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

large draughts of the finny prey in their nets. Like Christ he taught 
much by parables and precept. 

" On one occasion, having returned from a ministerial journey, as he 
entered Madura, the people came out in crowds to meet him, strewing 
the groiind with branches of cocoa-nut trees, and desiring to hear him. 
He addressed them in parables, the conclusion and moral of one of 
which, called the parable of the fishes, runs thus: 'And thus it is, 
O people of Madura, that you ought to protect the weak and each 
other, and not retaliate upon an enemy the wrong he may have done 
you.' 

" Here we see the peace doctrine preached in all its purity. ' And 
thus it was,' says a writer, ' that Chrishna' spread among the people the 
holy doctrines of purest morality, and initiated his hearers into the 
exalted principles of charity, of self-denial, and self-respect at a time 
when the desert countries of the west were inhabited only by savage 
tribes; ' and we will add long before Christianity was thought of. Purity 
of life and spiritual insight, we are told, were distinguishing traits in the 
character of this oriental sin-atoning Saviour, and that ' he was often 
moved with compassion for the down trodden and the suffering. ' 

" Many' of the precepts uttered by Chrishna display a profound 
wisdom and depth of thought equal to any of those attributed to Jesus 
Christ. In proof of the statement, we will recite a few of the examples 
out of the hundi-eds in our possession : i. Those who do not control their 
passions cannot act properly towards others. 2. The evil we inflict upon 
others follow lis as our shadows follow our bodies. 3. Only the humble 
are the beloved of God. 4. Virtue sustains the soul as the mviscles 
sustain the body. 5. When the poor man knocks at your door, take 
him and administer to his wants, for the poor are the chosen of God 
(Christ said, ' God hath chosen the poor '). 6. Let your hand be always 
open to the unfortunate. 7. Look not upon a woman with unchaste 
desires. 8. Avoid envy, covetousness, falsehood, imposture and slander, 
and sexual desire. 9. Above all things, cultivate love for 3'our neighbor. 
10. "When you die you leave your worldly wealth behind you ; but j-our 
virtue and vices follow after yovi. 11. Contemn riches and worldly 
honor. 12. Seek the company of the wicked in order to reform them. 
13. Do good for its own sake, and expect not j'our reward for it on earth. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 321 

14. The soul is immortal, but must be pure and free from all sin and 
stain before it can return to Him who gave it. 15. The soul is inclined 
to good when it follows the onward light. 16. The soul is responsible to 
God for its actions, who has established rewards and punishments. 17. 
Cultivate that inward knowledge which teaches which is right and 
wrong. 18. Never take delight in another's misfortune. 19. It is better 
to forgive an injury than avenge it. 20. You can accomplish by kind- 
ness what you cannot by force. 21. A noble spirit finds a cure for 
injustice by forgetting. 22. Pardon the offense of others but not your 
own. 23. What you blame in others do not practice yourself 24. By 
forgiving an enemy you make many friends. 25. Do right from hatred 
of evil, and not from fear of punishment. 26. A wise man corrects his 
own errors by observing those of others. 27. He who rules his temper 
conquers his greatest enemy. 28. The wise man governs his passions, 
but the fool obeys them. 29. Be at war with men's vices, but at peace 
with their persons. 30. There should be no disagreement between your 
lives and your doctrine. 31. Spend every minute as if it were the last. 
32. Lead not one life in public and another in private. 33. Anger, in 
trying to torture others, punishes itself 34. A disgraceful death is 
honorable when you die in a good cause. 35. By growing familiar with 
vices we learn to tolerate them easily. 36. We must master our evil 
propensities, or they will master us. 37. He who has conquered his 
propensities rules over a kingdom. 38. Protect, love and assist others, 
if you would serve God. 39. From thought springs the will, and from 
the will action, true or false, just or unjust. 40. As the sandal tree 
perfumes the axe which fells it, so the good man sheds fragrance on his 
enemies. 41. Spend a portion of each day in pious devotion. 42. To 
love the virtue of others is to brighten your own. 43. He who gives to 
the needy loses nothing himself. 44. A good, wise and benevolent man 
cannot be rich. 45. Much riches is a curse to the possessor. 46. The 
wounds of the soul are more important than those of the body. 47. The 
virtuous man is like the banyan tree, which shelters and protects all 
around it. 48. Money does not satisfy the love of gain, but only 
stimulates it. 49. Your greatest enemy is in your own bosom. 50. To 
flee when charged is to confess yovir own guilt. 51. The wound of 

conscience leaves a scar. 

21 



322 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

"We will cite a few examples relative to women: i. He who is 
cursed by women is ciirsed by God. 2. God will punisb him who laughs 
at woman's sufferings. 3. When woman is honored, God is honored. 
4. The virtuous woman will have but one husband, and the right-minded 
man but one wife. 5. It is the highest crime to take advantage of the 
weakness of woman. 6. Woman should be loved, respected, and pro- 
tected by husbands, fathers and brothers. 

" II. Crucifixion of Hindoo Sakia, b. c. 600. How many gods 
who figured in Hindoo history suffered death upon the cross as atoning 
offerings for the sins of mankind is a point not clearly established by 
their sacred books. But the death of the, God above named, known as 
Sakia, Buddha Sakia, or Muni is distinctly referred to by several writers, 
both Oriental and Christian, though there appears to be in Buddhist 
countries different accounts of the death of the famous and extensively 
worshipped sin-atoning Saviour. 

" In some countries the story runs, a God was crucified by an arrow 
being driven through his body, which fastened him to a tree ; the tree, 
with the arrow thus projecting at right angles, formed the cross, emblem- 
atical of the atoning sacrifice. Sakia, an account states was crucified by 
his enemies for the humble act of plucking a flower in a garden — doubt- 
less seized on a mere pretext, rather than as being considered a crime. 

" One of the accusations brought against Christ, it will be remem- 
bered, was that of plucking the ripened ears of corn on the Sabbath. 
And it is a remarkable circumstance, that in the pictures of Christian 
countries representing the Virgin Mary with the infant Jesus in her 
arms, either the child or the mother is frequently represented with a 
bunch of flowers in the hand. That his crucifixion was designed as a 
sin-atoning offering is evident from the following declaration found in his 
sacred biography, viz : ' He in mercy left Paradise, and came down to 
earth because he was filled with compassion for the sins and miseries of 
mankind. He sought to lead them into better paths, and took their 
suffering ixpon himself that he might expiate their crimes and mitigate 
the punishment they must otherwise inevitabl}'' undergo.' 

" He believed, and taught his followers, that all sin is inevitably 
punished, either in this or the future life ; and so great were his sym- 
pathy and tenderness, that he condescended to suffer that punishment 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 323 

himself by an ignoininous death upon the cross, after which he 
descended in Hades (Hell) to suffer for a time (three days) for the 
inmates of that horrible prison, that he might show he sympathized 
with them. After his resurrection, and before his ascension to heaven, 
as well as during his earthly sojourn, he imparted to the world some 
beautiful, lofty and soul-elevating precepts. 'The object of his mission,' 
says a writer, ' was to instruct those who were straying from the right 
path, and expiate the sins of mortals by his own suffering and procure 
for them a happy entrance into Paradise by obedience to his precepts and 
prayers to his name.' ' His followers always speak of him as one with 
God from all eternity.' His most common, title was ' the Saviour of the 
World.' He was also called ' the Benevolent One,' ' the Dispenser of 
Grace,' ' The Source of Life,' ' the Light of the World,' ' the True 
Light,' etc. 

" His mother was a very j^^ire, refined, pious and devout woman ; 
never indulged in any impure thoughts, words or actions. She was so 
much esteemed for her virtues and for being the mother of a God, that 
an escort of ladies attended her wherever she went. Tlie trees bowed 
before her as she passed through the forest, and flowers sprang up wher- 
ever her foot pressed the ground. She was saluted as ' the Holy Virgin, 
Queen of Heaven.' It is said that when her divine child was born, he 
stood upright and proclaimed, ' I will put an end to the sufferings and 
sorrows of the world.' And immediately a light shone round about the 
young Messiah. 

" He spent much time in retirement and like Christ in another 
respect, was once tempted by a demon, who offered him all the honors and 
wealth of the world. But he rebuked the devil, saying, ' Begone ; hinder 
me not.' He began, like Christ to preach his gospel and heal the sick 
when about twenty-eight years of age. And it is declared, ' The blind 
saw, the deaf heard, the dumb spoke, the lame danced, and the crooked 
became straight.' Hence the people declared, ' He is no mortal child but 
an incarnation of the Deity.' His religion was of a very superior char- 
acter. He proclaimed, ' My law is a law of grace for all.' His religion 
knew no race, no .sex, no caste, and no aristocratic priesthood. 

" ' It taught,' says Max Muller, ' the equality of all men, and the broth- 
erhood of the human race.' ' All men, without regard to rank, birth or 



324 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

nation,' says Dunckar, ' form according to Buddha's view, one great suffer- 
ing association in this earthly vale of tears ; therefore the commandments 
of love, forbearance, patience, compassion, pity, brotherliness of all 
men.' 

" Klaproth (a German professor of Oriental languages) says this 
relieion is calculated to ennoble the human race. ' It is difficult to com- 
prehend,' says a French writer (M. Laboulay) ' how men, not assisted 
by revelation, could have soared so high, and approached so near the 
truth.' 

" Dunckar says this Oriental God ' taught self denial, chastity, tem- 
perance, the control of the passions, to bear injustice from others, to 
suffer death quietly, and without hate of your persecutor, to grieve not for 
one's own misfortune, but for those of others.' An investigation of their 
history will show that they lived iip to these moral injunctions. 

" Besides the five great commandments, says a Wesleyan missionary 
(Spense Hardy) in Dahmma Padam, ' every shade of vice, hypocrisy, 
anger, pride, suspicion, greediness, gossiping and cruelty to animals is 
guarded against by special precepts. Among the virtues recommended, 
we find not .only reverence for parents, care of children, submission to 
authority, gratitude, moderation in all things, submission in time of trial, 
equanimity at all times, but virtues unknown in some systems of morality, 
such as the duty of forgiving injuries, and not rewarding evil for evil.' 
And we will add, both charity and love are specially recommended. 

" We have it also upon the authority of Dunckar, that ' Buddha pro- 
claimed that salvation and redemption have come for all, even the lowest 
and most abject classes.' For he broke down the iron castle of the Brah- 
minical code which had so long ruled India, and aimed to place all 
mankind iipon a level. His followers have been stigmatized by Christian 
professors as ' idolators ' but Sir John Bowring, in his ' Kingdom and 
People of Siam,' denies that they are idolators, 'because' says he 'no 
Buddhist believes his image to be God, or anything more than > an out- 
ward representation of Deity.' Their deific images are looked upon with 
the same views and feelings as a Christian venerates the photograph of 
his deceased friend. Hence if one is an idolater, the other is also. 

" With respect to the charge of polytheism, missionary M. Hue says, 
* that although their religion embraces many inferior deities who fill the 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 325 

same offices that angels do under the Christian system ; ' yet, adds M. 
Hue, ' Monofheism is the real character of Buddhism,' and confirms the 
statement by the testimony of a Thibetan. It should be noted here, that 
although Buddhism succeeded in converting about three hundred million, 
or one-third of the inhabitants of the globe, it was never propagated by the 
sword, and never persecuted the disciples of other religions. Its conquests 
were made by a rational appeal to the human mind. 

" Mr. Hodgson says, 'It recognizes the infinite capacity of the human 
intellect.' And St. Hilaire declares ' Love for all beings is its nucleus ; 
and to love our enemies, and not persecute, are the virtues of this 
people.' 

" Max Muller says, ' Its moral code, taken by itself, is one of the 
most perfect the world has ever known.' Its five commandments are : 
I. Thou shalt not kill. 2. Thou shalt not steal. 3. Thou shalt not 
commit adultery or any impurity. 4. Thou shalt not lie. 5. Thou shalt not 
intoxicate thyself. To establish the above cited doctrines and precepts, 
Buddha sent forth his disciples into the world to preach his gospel to 
every creature. And if an}' convert had committed a sin in word, 
thought, or deed, he was to confess and repent. One of the tracts 
which they distributed declares, ' There is undoubtedly a life after 
this in which the virtuous expect the rewards of their good deeds. 
Judgment takes place immediately after death. 

" Buddha and his followers set an example to the world of enduring 
opposition and persecution with great patience and non-resistance. And 
some of them suffered martyrdom rather than abandon their principles, 
and gloried in thus sealing their doctrines with their lives. A story 
is told of a rich merchant, by the name of Purna, forsaking all to 
follow his lord and Master ; and also of his encountering and talking 
with a woman of low caste at a well, which reminds' us of a similar 
incident in the history of Christ. Biit his enemies, becoming jealous 
and fearful of his growing power, finally crucified him near the foot 
of the Nepaul Mountains about B. c. 600. But after his death, burial 
and resurrection, we are told he ascended back to heaven, where millions 
of his followers believed he had existed with Brahma from all eternity. 

"III. Thammuz of Syria Crucified b. c. 1160. The fullest 
history extant of this God-Saviour is probably that of Ctesias (B. c. 400), 



326 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

autbor of ' Persika.' The poet has perpetuated his memory in 
rhyme : 

' Trust, j'e saints, your Lord restored ; 

Trust ye in your risen Lord ; 
For the pains which Thanimnz endured 
Our salvation have procured.' 

" Mr. Higgins informs us (Anac. Vol. I, page 246) that this God 
was crucified at the period above named, as a sin atoning offering. The 
stanza just quoted is predicated upon the following Greek text, translated 
by Godwin : ' Trust 3'e in God, for out of his loins salvation is come unto 
us.' Julius Firmicus speaks of this God ' rising from the dead for the 
salvation of the world.' The Christian writer Parkhurst alludes to this 
Saviour as preceding the advent of Christ, and as filling to some extent 
the same chapter in sacred history. 

" IV. WiTTOBA OF THE TeLINGONESE CRUCIFIED B. C. 552. We 
have a very conclusive historical proof of the crucifixion of this heathen 
God. Mr. Higgins tells us : ' He is represented in bis history with nail 
holes in his hands and the soles of bis feet.' Nails, hammers and pinchers 
are constantly seen represented on bis crucifixion, and are objects of 
adoration among his followers. The iron crown of Lombardy has 
within it a nail that is claimed as a true original, and is much admired 
and venerated on that account. The worship of this crucified God, 
according to our author prevails chiefly in the Travancore and other 
southern countries in the region of Madura. 

" V. Iao of Nepaul Crucified b. c. 622. With respect to the cruci- 
fixion of this ancient Saviour we have this very definite and specific testi- 
mony, that ' he was crucified on a tree in Nepaul ' (see Gregorius, page 
202). The name of this incarnate God and Oriental Saviour occurs fre- 
quently in the Holy Bibles and sacred books of other countries. Some sup- 
pose Iao (often spelt Jao) is the root of the name of the Jewish God Jehovah. 

" VI. Hesus of the Celtic Druids Crucified b. c. S34. Mr. 
Higgins tell us that the Celtic Druids represent their God Hesus as hav- 
ing been crucified with a lamb one side and an elephant on the other, and 
that this occurred long before the Christian era. Also that a representa- 
tion of it may now be seen upon the ' fire tower of Brechin.' In this 
symbolical representation of the crucifixion, the elephant being the largest 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 327 

animal known, was chosen to represent the sins of the world while the 
Lamb, from its proverbial innocent nature was chosen to represent the 
innocency of the victim (the God offered as a propitiatory sacrifice). And 
thus we have ' the Lamb of God taking away the sins of the world — 
symbolical language used with respect to the offering of Jesus Christ. 
And here is indicated very clearly the origin of the figure. It is evidently 
borrowed from the Druids. We have the statement of the above writer 
that the legend was found among the Canutes of Gaul long before Jesus 
Christ was known to history. 

" VIL QuEXALCOTE OF MEXICO CRUCIFIED B. c. 587. Historic au- 
thority, relative to the crucifixion of this Mexican God, and to his exe- 
cution upon the cross as a propitiatory sacrifice for the sins of mankind, 
is explicit, unequivocal and ineffaceable. The evidence is tangible, and 
indelibly engraved upon steel and metal plates. One of these plates 
represents him as having been crucified on a mountain, another repre- 
sents him as having been crucified in the heavens, as St. Justin tells us 
Christ was. According to another writer he is sometimes represented as 
having been nailed to a cross, and by other accounts as hanging with a 
cross in his hand. 

" The ' Mexican Antiquities ' (Vol. VI, page 166) says ' Quexalcote 
is represented in the Codex Borgianus as nailed to the cross ' sometimes 
two thieves are represented as having been crucified with him. That the 
advent of the crucified Saviour and Mexican God was long anterior to the 
era of Christ is admitted by Christian writers. In the work above 
named (Codex Borgianus), may be found the account, not only of his 
crucifixion but his death and burial, descent into hell, and resurrection on 
the third day. And another work, entitled 'Codex Vaticanus' contains 
the story of his immaculate birth of a virgin mother b}^ the name of 
Chimalman. Many other incidents are found related of him in his 
sacred biography, in which we found the most striking counterparts to 
the more modern gospel story of Jesus Christ, such as his forty days 
temptation and fasting, his riding on an ass, his purification in the tem- 
ple, his baptism and regeneration by water, forgiving of sins, being 
anointed with oil, etc. ' All these things, and many more, found related 
of this Mexican God in their sacred books ' says Lord Kingsborough, 
a Christian writer, ' are curious and mysterious.' 



328 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

"VIII OuiRiNus OF Rome Crucified b. c. 500. — The crucifixion of 
this Roman Saviour is briefly noticed by Mr. Higgins, and is remarkable 
for presenting, like other crucified Gods, several parallel features to that 
of the Judean Saviour, not only in the circumstances related as attending 
his crucifixion, but also in a considerable portion of his antecedent life. 
He is represented, like Christ ; i, as having been conceived and brought 
forth by a virgin ; 2, his life was sought by the reigning king, Amulius ; 
3, he was of royal blood, his mother being of kingly descent ; 4, he was 
' put to death by wicked hands,' /. e. crucified ; 5, at his mortal exit the 
whole earth is said to have been enveloped in darkness, as in the case of 
Christ, Chrishna and Prometheus. And finally, he is resurrected and 
ascends back to heaven. 

" IX (^SCHYLUS) Prometheus, b. c. 547. — In the account of the 
crucifixion of Prometheus of Caucasus, as furnished by Seneca, Hesiod 
and other writers, it is stated that he was nailed to an upright beam of 
timber, to which were afiixed extended arms of wood, and that this cross 
was situated near the Caspian Straits. The modern story of this cruci- 
fied God, which represents him as having been bound to a rock for thirty 
years, while vultures preyed upon his vitals, Mr. Higgins pronounces an 
impious fraud. ' For,' says the learned historical writer, ' I have seen the 
account which declares he was nailed to a cross with hammer and nails.' 
Confirmator}^ of this statement is the declaration of Mr. Southwell, that 
' he exposed himself to the wrath of God in his zeal to save mankind.' 
The poet, in portraying his propitiatory offering, says : 

" ' Lo streaming from the fatal tree, 
His all-atoning blood, 
Is this the Infinite ? — yes, 'tis he — 
Prometheus and a God. 
Well might the sun in darkness hide, 
And veil his'^glories in. 
When God, the great Prometheus died. 
For man, the creature's sin.' 

"The 'New American Cyclopedia' (Vol. I, page 157), contains the 
following significant declaration relative to this sin-atoning Saviour : ' It 
is doubtful whether there is to be found in the whole range of Greek 
letters, deeper pathos than that of the divine woe of the beneficient demi- 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 329 

god Prometheus, crucified on his Scythian crags for his love to mortals.' 
Here we have first-class authority for the truth of the crucifixion of this 
Oriental God. 

" In ' Lempriere's Classical Dictionary,' ' Higgins' Anacalypsis,' and 
other works, may be found the following particulars relative to the final 
exit of the God above named, viz : i. That the whole frame of nature 
became convulsed; 2, the earth shook, the rocks were rent, the graves 
were opened, and in a storm, which seemed to threaten the dissolution of 
the universe, the solemn scene forever closed, and ' Our Lord and 
Saviour ' Prometheus, gave up the ghost. ' The cause for which he 
suffered,' says Mr. Southwell, ' was his love for the human race.' Mr. 
Taylor makes the statement in his Syntagma, that the whole story of 
Prometheus's crucifixion, burial and resurrection was acted in pantomime 
in Athens five hundred j^ears before Christ, which proves its great 
antiquity. Minutius Felix, one of the most popular Christian writers of 
the second century (in his ' Octavius,' see 291), thus addresses the people 
of Rome : ' Your victorious trophies not only represent a simple cross, 
but a cross with man on it ; ' and this iiiaii St. Jerome calls God. These 
coincidences furnish still further proof that the crucifixion of Gods has 
been very long prevalent among the heathen. 

" X. Crucifixion of Thulis of Egypt, b. c. 1700. — Thulis of Egypt, 
whence comes ' Ultima Thule,' died the death of the cross about thirtv- 
five hundred years ago. Ultima Thule was the island which marked the 
ultimate bounds of the extensive realms of the legitimate descendant of 
the Gods. This Egyptian Saviour appears also to have been known as 
Zulis, and with this name, Mr. Wilkinson tells us, ' his history is 
curiously illustrated in the sculptures made seventeen hundred years 
B. C. of a small retired chamber 13'ing nearly over the western adytum of 
the temple.' We are told twent3'-eight lotus plants, near his grave 
indicate the number of years he lived on earth. After suffering a violent 
death, he was buried, but rose again, ascended into heaven, and there 
became 'the judge of the dead,' or souls in a future state. Wilkinson 
says he came down from heaven to benefit mankind, and that he was said 
to be ' full of grace and truth.' 

" XI. Crucifixion of Indra of Thibet, b. c. 725. — The account of 
the God and Saviour Indra, may be found in Georgius, Thibetinuni Alpha- 



330 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

betum, page 230. In the work referred to may be found plates repre- 
senting the Thibetan Saviour as having been nailed to the cross. There 
are five wounds, representing the five nail-holes, and the piercing of the 
side. The antiquity of the story is beyond dispute. Marvellous stories 
were told of the birth of the Divine Redeemer. The mother was a 
\irgin of black complexion, and hence his complexion was of the ebony 
hue, as in the case of Christ and some other sin-atoning Saviours. He 
descended from heaven on a mission of benevolence, and ascended back 
to the heavenly mansion after his crucifixion. He led a life of strict 
celibacy, which he taught was essential to true holiness. He inculcated 
great tenderness toward all living beings. He could walk upon the 
waters or upon the air ; could foretell future events with great accuracy. 
He practiced the most devout contemplation, severe discipline of the body 
and mind, and acquired the most complete subjection of his passions. 
He was worshipped as a God who had existed as a spirit from all 
eternity, and his followers were called ' Heavenly Teachers.' 

"Xn. Alcestos of Euripedes, crucified b. c. 600. — The 'English 
Classical Journal' (Vol. XXXVH) furnishes us with the story of another 
crucified God known as Alcestos — a female God or Goddess ; and in this 
respect it is a novelty in sacred history, being the first, if not the only, 
example of a feminine God atoning for the sins of the world upon the 
cross. The doctrine of the trinity and atoning offering for sin was 
inculcated as a part of her religion. 

"XIII. Atys of Phrygia, crucified b. c. 1170. — Speaking of this 
crucified Messiah, the Anacalypsis informs us that several histories are 
given of him, but all concur in representing him as having been an aton- 
ing offering for sin. And the Latin phrase, ' suspenses hngo^'' found in 
his history indicates the manner of his death. He was suspended on a 
tree, crucified, buried and rose again. 

" XIV. Crite of Chaldea, crucified b. c. 1200. — The Chaldeans, as 
Mr. Higgins informs us, have noted in their sacred books the acpount of 
the crucifixion of a God with the above name. He was also known as 
' the Redeemer,' and was styled ' the ever blessed son of God,' ' the 
Saviour of the Race,' ' the Atoning Offering for an angry God,' etc. And 
when he was offered up both heaven and earth were shaken to their 
foundation. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 331 

" XV. Bali of Orissa, crucified b.c. 752. — We learn by the Oriental 
books that in the district of country known as Orissa, in Asia, they have 
a story of a crucified God, known by several names, including the above, 
all of which we are told signify ' Lord Second,' having reference to him 
as the second person or second member of the trinity, as most of the 
crucified Gods occupied that position in the triad of deities constituting 
the trinity, as indicated in the language ' Father, So7i and Holy Ghost.' 
The son in all cases being the atoning offering, ' the Crucified Redeemer 
and the second person of the trinity.' This God Bali was also called 
Baliu, and sometimes Bel. 

"The Anacalypsis informs us (Vol. I, 257) that monuments of this 
crucified Saviour, bearing great age, may be found amid the ruins of the 
magnificent city of Mahabalipore, partially buried amongst the figures 
in the temple. 

" XVI. MiTHRA OF Persia, crucified b. c. 600. — This Persian God, 
according to Mr. Higgins, was ' slain upon the cross to make atonement 
for mankind and to take away the sins of the world.' He was reputedly 
born on the 25th day of December, and crucified on a tree. It is a remark- 
able circumstance that two Christian writers (Mr. Faber and Mr. Bryant) 
both speak of his ' being slain,' and yet both omit to speak of the manner 
in which he was put to death. And the same with respect to other cruci- 
fied Gods of the Pagans. We might note other cases of crucifixion. 
Devatat of Siam, Ixion of Rome, Apollonius of Tyana in Capp.\- 
DOCI.^, are all reported in history as having ' died the death of the cross.' 

" IxiON, B. c. 400, according to Nimrod, was crucified on a wheel, the 
rim representing the world, and the spokes constituting the cross. It is 
declared ' He bore the burden of the world ' (that is, ' the sins of the 
world ') on his back while suspended on the cross. Hence he was some- 
times called ' the crucified spirit of the world.' With respect to Appol- 
lonius, it is a remarkable, if not suspicious, circumstance which should 
not be passed unnoticed, that several writers, while they recount a long 
list of miracles and remarkable incidents in this Cappadocian Saviour, 
extending through his whole life, and forming a parallel to similar inci- 
dents of the Christian Saviour, say not a word regarding his crucifixion. 
And a similar course has been pvirsued with respect to Mithra and other 
sin-atoning Gods, including Chrishna and Prometheus, as before noticed." 



332 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

By reference to Mackey's ' Lexicon of Freemasonry,' page 35, we learn 
that " Freemasons secretl}'- taught the doctrine of the crucifixion, atone- 
ment and resurrection long anterior to the Christian era, and that similar 
doctrines were taught in ' all the ancient mysteries,' thus proving that the 
conception of these tenets of faith existed at a very early period of time." 
And it may be noted here that the doctrine of salvation by crucifixion had 
likewise, with most of the ancient forms of religious faith, an astronomical 
representation, /. <?., a representation on astronomical symbols. According 
to the emblematic figures comprised in their altar-worship, people were 
saved by the sun's crucifixion or crossification, realized by crossing over 
the equinoctial line into the season of spring, and thereby gave out a 
saving heat and light to the world, and stimulated the generative organs 
of animal and vegetable life. It was from this conception that the ancients 
were in the habit of carving or painting the organs of generation upon 
the walls of their holy temples. The blood of the grape, which was 
ripened by the heat of the sun, as he crossed over by resurrection into 
spring (i. e.^ was crucified), was S3'mbolically " the blood of the cross," or 
" the blood of the Lamb." That the world moves in cycles, and that 
histor}^ continually repeats itself, admits of no question, and so from the 
ruins of one Empire rises another, equally as grand, and the teachings of 
one age are as sure to come to the surface again as the motions of the 
earth upon its axis will apparently make the sun rise in the East and set 
in the West. 

While it makes no difference from whom, whence, or where, origi- 
nated the Truths of the so-called Christian teachings, one thing is certain 
in relation to the account of the "Sixteen Saviours," from Thulis down, 
and that is their teachings belong to the oldest metaphysical philosophies 
known to mankind and have been known to every epoch of the world's 
history. These Truths must have emanated from some reliable source, 
since they were embodied in all religious and metaphysical philosophies. 

If we go back to the first days of Christianity we shall find the early 
fathers of the church turning the old pagan philosophies into new 
Christian teachings and that, too, in the very temples wherein had been 
practiced the ancient pagan rites. During the reign of Constantine these 
were readily transformed into sacred edifices for the growing sect of 
Christians. With slight alterations these temples were soon adapted to 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 333 

Christian worship, while magnificent statues of Jupiter, with a few 
sweeping strokes of the chisel and a little plaster were transformed into 
God, the Son, or some Saint, and a priceless Venus into the Virgin Mary, 
the Mother of God. Where sounds of old pagan rites and Greek schools 
of Philosophy had vibrated for so many long centuries, were now to be 
heard the chanting of Psalms by monkish priests. The incense which 
had so long burned upon the altars, in honor of the pagan gods, may still 
be found swinging in the censers of the Romish Church of to-day. 

Again Baptism does not belong exclusively to the Christian Church, 
nor did it originate with its teachings, for long ages before John the 
Baptist lived these rites were universally observed, being a mere relic of 
the early da3's of the world's history. Its use by the Christians is iden- 
tical with that of the ancient Egyptian and Babylonian Mysteries, a 
symbol of regeneration and expiation of sin and a purification of the body. 
In nearly all the Mysteries baptism was considered to be indispensable. 
Purification of the body, by immersion in some of the sacred rivers, was 
an actual necessity before the candidate could be received and initiated 
into the sacred Mysteries of India. Christ himself was baptized by John 
the Baptist in the flowing waters of the river Jordan. 

The Vedic Hymns praise the purifying powers of the sacred rivers of 
India and one of the most noted places is at the confluence of the three 
sacred rivers Jumna, Ganges and Sarasvati, at Allahabad. The natives 
claim three rivers to represent Matter, Spirit and Life. During my stay 
at this city I carefully examined the confluence of the two rivers, Jumna 
and Ganges, but could not find the third. I spoke to a Babu about it, 
when he took me down into an underground chamber of the old ruined 
palace of Akbar Khan and showed me a little water trickling down the 
wall and said, there is the evidence of the Sarasvati. The Zendavesta 
ascribe extraordinary virtues to the sacred waters of the holy river 
Ardvisura. The Hindu was purified by immersion in the sacred waters 
of the Ganges long centuries before Christ, and to-day the same cere- 
monies are performed by their descendants in nearly all of the rivers of 
India as well as the Ganges. 

The Zarathustrians used pure filtered water for their purifications, 
in addition to prayers and certain other ceremonies which are preserved 
and practiced by the Parsees, after the same manner as by their great 



334 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

ancestors, long before Krishna descended upon the plains of India and 
gave to the people the sublime and beautiful teachings now as old as the 
world itself This ceremony of immersion is still practiced as one of the 
most sacred and inexpressibly beautiful symbols of the purification of 
the heart by water as a pledge of thai only which is Just, Right and 
True. 

Christianity most assuredly extinguished the sacrificial fires of the 
pagans and she yet built far greater ones in endeavoring to bring the 
people into the fold of Holy Mother Church. I do not desire to speak 
against any religion or any philosophy. I onl}' want to show that the 
teachings of Jesus and all those other Saviours had been taught long 
centuries before Abraham went down into the Land of Egypt and conse- 
quently they must have originated from some source. Therefore, if 
we search very carefully for the source, or fountain-head, of these pure 
Theosophical and Philosophical Truths we will find they originated in 
the " Land of the Vedas " and in the ancient Wisdom of India. 

Many facts impress themselves upon our minds, in taking a survey 
of all the religions dominating the world in different ages. Their funda- 
mental principles have been the same, though covered in many instances, 
with a mass of rubbish, while the eternal verities remain intact in each, 
only clothed in different vestments, making them dijEcult of recognition, 
excepting to the initiated. The very identity of these great and glorious 
Truths establishes the fact that each one of the sixteen Saviours must 
certainly have been Leaders and Martyrs of their race, who suffered and 
died for their love of humanity. That they were members of a Brother- 
hood of great spiritual Teachers, who endeavored to restore what a 
corrupt Priesthood had degraded, is to me a positive verity. These 
Teachers were most assuredly helped in their missions by the Adepts 
and members of the inferior degrees, who worked earnestl}^ and faithfully 
to restore the Secret Doctrine of the Ancient Wisdom Religion. In like 
manner were the teachings of Christ, the Master, assisted, b}'^ the 
Auditors, Catechumens and Faithful, during the struggles of the Chris- 
tian Church against the old pagan philosophies, who was successful in 
restoring the glorious precepts of the Ancient Wisdom in Judea, Rome, 
Egypt and other placps for a few centuries until it finally degenerated 
into Priestcraft and Sacerdotalism, when all those profound ethical teach- 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 335 

ings of our Master were struck down and replaced by the " Holy 
Inquisition." 

Masonr}', a lineal descendant of the ancient Mystei'ies, conceals 
within her bosom symbols that will reveal to the student a profound 
knowledge of the ancient philosophies, older, by far, than the Vedas or 
the Zend-avesta. We have proof positive that these very symbols were 
designed by the Perfect Masters and Adepts, as a safe and sacred reposi- 
tory for the sublime teachings of the Secret Doctrine, as well as for the 
preservation of the Royal Secret, in order to convey to those generations 
yet unborn a knowledge of the Ancient Wisdom and the power of the 
"Lost Word." People may scoff and laugh at the claims of profound 
knowledge being contained in our symbols, though they cannot dispute 
their antiquity and dare not say they were fabricated by the builders of 
Rome, Greece or any other special nation, such as Egypt, Chaldea or 
Assyria. They are found in all of these countries, being inscribed upon 
the oldest monuments and statues known to exist in all parts of the 
world, and have come down to us through the drifting ages from the 
interior of India, possibly the plains of Gobi, where are to be found to-day 
records of a far higher civilization than is apparent in the dawn of this 
great twentieth century. 

Go back to the distant ages of antiquity and search among the 
ruined empires of every nation throughout the earth ; study their mystic 
teachings and occult doctrines ; aye, each and every one of them, then 
study the sacred writings of these same people, examine carefully their 
Mystic Rites and ceremonies, and you will find proof positive of a "Secret 
Doctrine " running through them all, from the most remote ages to the 
present day. This Secret Doctrine is the container and contained of all 
Truths, carefully hidden from the profane ; a great and sublime philoso- 
phy, the fountain of all Truth, the source of all Wisdom, the key to all 
the higher spiritual and intellectual qualifications. 

The Wisdom itself, in fact, permeated all teachings, mystic rites and 
ceremonies everywhere, and in all its sublimity and grandeur it is to be 
found in the glorious symbols of our beloved Ancient and Accepted Scot- 
tish Rite. It will, however, require earnest and profound study before 
the student will be able to obtain the faintest glimmer of their meaning. 
He must concentrate his mind upon each and every one, and as I have 



336 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

hereinbefore stated, there is to be no jumping from one degree to another, 
skipping the symbology of those below. He must carefully study each 
and every symbol and allegory, until thoroughly understood, as presented 
to him, for the one below is the key to the one above. Like the sublime 
invocation of the Turanian Adept the meaning does not lie altogether in 
the symbol. The key must be found before we can thoroughly under- 
stand the ineffable Wisdom contained in the series that will transcend all 
we have ever known or dreamed of, and open to our view the great 
Truths taught by the Masters in every age. 

During some of my lectures I have had manj'^ people come to me and 
say : " Well, Doctor, I enjoj'ed your ' talk ' very much, indeed, but when 
you spoke of lost Civilizations, Wisdom, Knowledge, etc., I can't believe 
it. Of course, I can very readily understand the Rise and Fall of 
empires, and that upon the ruins of one the foundations of another is 
laid ; but you could never make me believe that the world was ever more 
civilized or enlightened than it is to-day, under the ' Light of the New 
Dispensation.' You may talk of the Lemurians and Atlanteans as much 
as you like, but I believe the world of to-day is just as full of knowledge 
and Wisdom as it ever was ; and as to the sinking of those immense 
continents beneath the ocean, it is the height of absurdity." 

Now, in answer to j ust si;ch people, let me say this : During a visit 
to Soiithern California, to the city of San Jose, in the latter part of the 
year of 1899, I attended a Lecture illustrated by stereopticon views which 
showed the wondrous beauties of the Island of New Zealand, its magnifi- 
cent rivers, streams, mountains and the gigantic tree ferns for which this 
country is noted ; in fact, the Lecturer, a Maori, a native of the Island 
and a scholarly gentleman, a graduate of an English college, described to 
us not only the topographical features of the country, but its Flora and 
Fauna, as well as the manners and customs of the natives. After which 
he threw upon the screen a great number of Native Chiefs, their sons 
wives and daughters, calling our attention especially to the features of the 
young men and women, whose phrenological development would compare 
very favorably with our own Anglo-Saxon Race, both in beauty of expres- 
sion and in evidences of a very high order of intellectual development. 

He told us that he was on a Lecturing tour for the express purpose 
of making money to educate the native children of his country so as to 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 337 

preserve the last remnant of his Race. He said he knew that his people 
were doomed to pass away unless something were done for them. He 
also said it would be no use to try and raise the moral standard of the old 
people of his country. The young children, however, could be trained 
and educated so as to preserve their native characteristics, while living 
and growing up among the Anglo-Saxons who now dominated his coun- 
try. He told us that in coming from his country, New Zealand, to the 
city of San Francisco he had visited quite a number of the islands in both 
the South and North Pacific Oceans, and on going ashore at the differ- 
ent islands ^'' en ronte^'' he was very much surprised to note that the 
natives of the various places visited had the same peculiar characteristics 
as those of his own people. On arriving at the Sandwich Islands he 
went on shore at Honolulu, where he heard the natives in conversation, 
and was surprised to find that he could understand every word they said 
as they were speaking his own language, with very slight variations, 
which he described at the time, but I have since forgotten. He said it 
convinced him that the various Islands of Oceanica must at one time 
have formed a vast Continent, and he thoroughly believed the natives of 
these Islands to be lineal descendants of the Lost Continent of Lemuria. 
After the lecture, on returning home, I thought considerably on 
what had been said by the lecturer, and after my meditation I began to 
realize that Knowledge could be lost, just as easily as a man could lose 
some trifling article out of his pocket ; for instance : Would it not be 
possible for a tremendous seismic disturbance to occur, through some 
cause or another, and the poles of the earth be entirely changed from 
their present position, and America, with the whole of Europe, suddenly 
be forced beneath the ocean. Suppose all the civilized portions of the 
earth were wiped out of existence, submerged with all arts, sciences, 
philosophies, etc., a thousand fathoms below the surgiuig ceaseless waves, 
with all history and record of civilization entirely lost, while from out 
the depths of the briny deep new continents should re-appear, to preserve 
the equilibrium of the earth's centre, giving to the islands of the Atlantic 
and Pacific Oceans their places once again as the sierrated peaks of 
magnificent mountain ranges, upon these various continents, while all 
that would remain of the lost ones would be the tops of the mountain 
ranges, forming islands which in many instances would be widely sepa- 
22 



338 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

rated one from the other, with possibly here and there a few hundred 
thousand people still in existence, who had been saved in some very 
extraordinary manner from this terrible cataclysm, this wrecking of a 
World. 

The thought of intellectual development would stop right there, man 
would drop back into the Paleolithic age and self-preservation would be 
the dominant chord among them. What a tremendous struggle would 
then take place for a mere existence, and it is self-evident that the civili- 
zation which had once been theirs would fall back into traditions and 
legends, to be handed down from one generation to another. It would 
grow more misty and hazy, more difficult of comprehension as the drifting 
centuries rolled along. Civilization would have to begin again with the 
life of a new race, as it were. After the obliteration of the older people, 
their children would not be able to understand anything, comparatively 
speaking, of the wondrous knowledge buried deep beneath the surging 
waves surrounding their island home. Knowledge would have to be 
obtained through long and bitter experience. No matter to what point 
their phrenological development had attained, they would again have to 
struggle along semi-barbarous paths before reaching any great intel- 
lectual development. It is therefore possible for knowledge to become 
entirely lost, though places may exist wherein may be stored and pre- 
served the Knowledge and Wisdom pertaining to this lost civilization, as 
above stated, just as in the plains of Gobi, or Thibet, for it is positively 
asserted that there in secret places are stored the remains of a far more 
ancient civilization than our own. 

No doubt there are thousands of people, aye, millions, who would 
laugh to scorn this statement, but their laughing does not destroy or 
alter the fact of its existence. Let me repeat to you right here the 
apothegm of Narada, the ancient Hindu philosopher: Never utter the 
words: I do not know this — therefore it is false. 



^prott-2Mfjat it Eeacfies* 



339 



Cbc register ! "You're right ; 
tlbere is my name in letters large and bold; 
^banks, Brotber XTiler. ]Now will I unfold 

My apron wbite. 

Step this way to tbe light, 
■Chat all may see how clean it is and fair; 
60, that is well. ]Vow tic it on the square — 

My apron white. 

So let me ever wear — 
finding my pleasure in a spotless name, 
"Cbc honor of tbe Craft's unsullied fame— 

My apron white. 

— Sydney Freemason. 



340 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 341 



CHAPTER XV. 

THE GOLDEN FLEECE— ROMAN EAGLE-MASONIC APRON— 
WHAT IT TEACHES. 

IN this chapter, my dear Friends and Brothers, let me call your 
attention to the ceremony of the investiture of the Lamb-skin, 
or the white leather apron, the badge of a Mason, one of the most 
profound and deeply interesting symbols in Masonry, and one that is 
pregnant with occult meaning, one that demonstrates the ancient occult 
axiom of the Delphic Oracle — " Know thyself." 

When first our Neophyte is invested with that most sublime em- 
blem, the apron, he is told that it is more ancient than the " Golden 
Fleece " or " Roman Eagle," and that it is more honorable than the 
" Star and Garter," etc., etc. Now among all those who have been so 
told and so invested, how many are there who understand anything at all 
about the Golden Fleece and Roman Eagle, or the Honor pertaining to 
the Star and Garter ? I will venture to say, that not one in a thousand 
knows anything at all about either one or the other, and still less of the 
profound symbology that is contained in the badge of a Mason — the white 
leather apron. Therefore, in order that you, my dear Brothers of all 
Rites, may be enabled to thoroughly understand something about these 
various subjects, I will write upon them for your especial edification. 

In Grecian Mythology we find that Athamas, the son of the King of 
Thessaly, married Nephele (the cloud goddess), by whom she had a son 
Phrixus, and a daughter Helle. Some time afterward he fell in love with 
and married a mortal called Ino. This act of Athamas in taking to wife 
a mortal aroused intense jealousy in the heart of Nephele, and conse- 
quently she visited the earth with a drought, which Ino endeavored to 
avert by sacrificing her stepson, Phrixus, upon the Altar of Zeus 
Laphystius, through an oracle that she pretended to have received. 
But Nephele, the mother of Phrixus, who was watching over him, sent 
him a ram, with a golden fleece, so that both himself and sister Helle 



342 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

might be enabled to make their escape from their vindictive and treach- 
erous stepmother, who sought to destroy them. 

Phrixus and his sister now make their escape from Thessaly 
upon the ram ; but during their flight through the air Helle fell off 
and was drowned in the waters below, and the place wherein she fell has 
ever since borue the name " Hellespont." Phrixus arrived safely at the 
city of Colchis, where he offered i:p the ram as a sacrifice to Zeus as the 
" aider of flight " (Zeus Phyxius), and he made a present of its golden 
fleece to King Acetes, who hung it upon an oak in the sacred grove of 
Ares (the son of Zeus by Hera, the Greek name for the God of War, and 
which the Romans called Mars). Acetes gave Phrixus his daughter 
Chalciope to wife, by whom he had two sons, whom he named Cytissorus 
and Argus, both of whom he eventually sent back to his home. Cytis- 
s5rus saved the life of his grandfather Athamas from being sacrificed, and 
Argus built the ship Argo which was named after him. 

This vessel was the celebrated ship that carried the Argonauts in 
their glorious expedition to recover the Golden Fleece, under the leader- 
ship of Jason. They eventually accomplished their purpose by the help 
of the king's daughter, Media, who was in love with Jason. The account 
of this Argonautic expedition is well worth reading, as it will give you a 
good account of the recovery of the wonderful Golden Fleece. 

The Order of the Golden Fleece was founded by Phillip II, the Good, 
Duke of Burgundy, on the loth day of January, in the year 1429, on the 
occasion of his marriage with the Infanta, Isabella of Portugal. This 
Order was originally composed of thirty-one members, all of whom were 
*' Gentilhomnies de ttom et (Tarmes^ sans reprochey The office of Grand 
Master passed to the house of Hapsburg in 1477, with the acquisition of 
the dominions of Burgundy and the Netherlands. 

In 1 5 16 Pope Leo X consented to increase the number of the 
Knights, includiug the Sovereign, to fifty-two, but at the present day the 
statutes have been changed and the Sovereign is allowed to create j\ust as 
many Knights as he may deem wise, providing they be Catholics and are 
of noble birth, but in the case of a nobleman of the Protestant belief a 
papal sanction would have to be given before he could be legally installed 
or created a Knight. After the accession of Charles V, in 1555, the 
Spanish-Dutch line of the house of Austria remained in possession of the 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 343 

Order, and in the year 1700 the Emperor Charles IV and also Phillip of 
Spain both claimed the so/e right to dominate the Order. The Emperor 
Charles IV carried away the archives of the Order to Vienna, where their 
inauguration was solemnized in most magnificent splendor in the year 
1 713. At the same time Phillip V of Spain claimed to be the legitimate 
head of the Order, and as Grand Master he protested against the preten- 
sions of the Emperor Charles IV. They wrangled a long time between 
themselves until the other powers interfered, when it was mutually or 
tacitly agreed that both powers should have and hold their right to the 
name, and that there should be two Orders of the Golden Fleece, known 
as the Spanish and the Austrian. 

The decoration of the Order is a golden ram pendent by a ring which 
passes around its middle, and hangs from a jewel of very elaborate design, 
with beautiful enamelling in different colors and the whole of which is 
suspended from the collar of the Order. Its motto is : " Pretium non 
viW'' (not to be condemned is the reward of labor), and the festal day is 
St. Andrews. 

I have not only given you an account of the Mythological idea of the 
Golden Fleece, but also a description of the origin of an Order of Knight- 
hood of the same name, which I hope will prove of interest to my very 
dear Brothers and Friends. I place a very high value on ancient Myth- 
ology, and I really believe that every intelligent man and Brother who 
has not had the pleasure of reading Bacon's " Essays and Wisdom of the 
Ancients," should most assuredly do so at their earliest convenience for 
each and all will find a very great amount of wisdom contained in the 
explanations of those so-called fables or mythological ideas of the x'lncient 
Greeks and Romans. 

" More ancient than the Roman Eagle." — Yes, the badge of a 
Mason is far older than the so-called " Roman Eagle," because " The 
Roman Eagle" came into existence just before the Cimbrian War and 
previous to the commencement of the Christian Era. We learn from 
Xenophon and other ancient authorities, that the Eagle, with its wings 
displayed, represented the standards of the Persians, long before the 
"Roman Eagle "was even dreamed of, or Rhea Silvia fed the sacred 
fire upon the altar of Alba-Longa, and there is no question in my mind 
but that the Persians took this emblem from the ancient Assyrians, who 



344 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

most assuredly carried it as their especial ensign, upon whose banners and 
stafifs it appeared until Imperial Babylon, " Queen city of the World," 
with her conquering armies bowed their mighty heads beneath the yoke 
of Cyrus, from whom, no doubt, he borrowed this glorious emblem, the 
Golden Eagle with extended wings, and placed it upon his own standards 
as an emblem of Victory over his enemies. 

An Eagle stripped of its feathers was carried upon the staffs and 
standards of the ancient Egyptians as their ensign, while the Eagides or 
Ptolemies carried as their ensign the head of a White Eagle, stripped ; 
so you see that the Roman Eagle is of mere modern origin compared to 
its antiquity among those more ancient Empires of the world, for we find 
it in all ages, in every ancient nation as ah emblem holding one of the 
most exalted places in their mythologies. In a great many nations this 
glorious bird was held sacred to the Sun, and we find a great many ref- 
erences made to it in the Bible. Like various other symbols it is lost in 
the hoary ages of antiquity, and like the Cross and Svastica, it belongs to 
no special age of the world's historj^ ; but the ." Roman Eagle," that is 
very different, for the name itself shows from whence it originated. 

In the year B. c. 155, Cains Marius, a farmer's son, was born at 
Arpinum (the' birthplace of Cicero), and became, through his own indi- 
vidual exertions, one of the ablest generals of his day, and just before the 
Cimbrian War he consecrated the Eagle, with extended wings, to be the 
Roman standard, at the same time doing away with the Wolf, Horse, 
and the Boar, that had preceded it, and thus the " Roman Eagle " was 
carried at the head of every Legion of the Roman Empire throughout 
the world. From that time forward it was known through all the wars 
of that empire as the " Roman Eagle " or Rome and her Eagles^ because 
before her mighty Legions and cohorts this king of birds was displayed 
and victory came to those sturdy warriors who fought under the out- 
stretched pinions of their glorious " Roman Eagle." 

The Eagle was adopted by our own country in the year i7'-)3, 
and now bears upon her back the dominant coin of the world, the 
" Almighty Dollar," found in every country upon the face of the earth. 
The " Little Corporal " Napoleon I, adopted the Eagle in the year 1804. 
It was superseded by the Iris, or Fleur-de-lys in 1815, and it was again 
restored by Napoleon III in 1852. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 345 

The founding of secular chivalric orders originated during the time 
when Europe was in continued warfare among the different powers that 
dominated that continent, in imitation of the various ecclesiastic orders 
that preceded them. These orders were founded by the reigning sov- 
ereigns of the different countries for the express purpose of drawing into 
more friendly relations and union their prominent Knights and soldiers, 
so as to ally them, one with another, and at the same time for the pur- 
pose of rewarding those who had performed some special service to their 
King or their country, or to any one whom the Sovereign wished to espe- 
cially honor, as a mark of esteem, with a special distinction. In this way 
he drew them nearer and closer to him as sworn friends and companions. 

Standing at the head of all the great Orders of Knighthood which 
still maintain their pristine reputation is that of the Most Noble Order of 
the Garter that was founded by King Edward III, of England, about 
the middle of the fourteenth century. It is very difficult to state the 
exact date of the founding of this order for the simple reason that the ori- 
ginal records were lost, and consequently the date is uncertain. The origin 
of this Order was, according to the legend pertaining to it, as follows : 

King Edward III found a garter that had been dropped by the 
Countess of Salisbury at a ball. He stooped, picked it up and placed it 
around his leg, uear the knee. His courtiers observing the act looked 
with questioning eyes at the King, when he responded to their looks by 
saying : " Honi soit qui mal y pcnse^'' (Evil be to him who evil thinks), or 
as some translate it : (shamed be he who thinks evil of it.) To this finding 
of a garter the foundation of this noble Order is ascribed and the distin- 
guishing insignia, unlike other orders, is not the badge or collar, but the 
garter itself, consisting of a blue ribbon of velvet, edged with gold, having 
a golden buckle, worn upon the left leg of the gentlemen ; but when the 
sovereign is a woman it is always worn by her upon the left arm, and 
near the elbow. 

The badge called the George, or Great George, is a representation of 
a figure of St. George in the act of killing the dragon, suspended from 
the collar of gold, composed of twenty-six coiled garters, connected 
together with links of a beautiful design. The lesser George is worn 
pendant from a blue ribbon over the left shoulder, which is an eight- 
pointed star (silver) having the cross of St. George in the middle, while 



346 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

around it is the garter itself, on which is inscribed the motto of the Order. 
In the year 1344, on the 19th day of January, it was placed under the 
protection of " God, the Virgin Mary, St. George of Cappadocia and St. 
Edward the Confessor." 

The vesture of the order consists of a mantle of blue velvet, lined 
with white silk, with a hood and short tunic of crimson velvet ; a black 
velvet hat, surmounted with a plume of white ostrich feathers, in the 
center of which is a tuft of black heron feathers. Its members originally 
consisted of the Sovereign, the Prince of Wales and twenty-five Knight 
companions ; but it is now open to such other English princes and foreign 
Sovereigns as are entitled to the honor. The usual number of Knights 
were about fifty, all of whom were elected by the Knight companions 
themselves, but now they are appointed by the reigning Sovereign. 

The White Leather Apron. — The most profound philosophical 
secrets of Masonry have been hidden in her symbols, wherein are to be 
found the deepest and most sublime Truths known to the ancient 
Mystic Philosophers of every age. No matter to what part of the world 
we force our investigation we shall find a series of symbols in each and 
every one of them as old as the world itself, symbols that contain the 
most sublirlie and profound Metaphysical and Theosophical Truths 
known to man. A knowledge of which will enable the student to come 
to an understanding of himself and his own potential forces latent within 
his heart, which wall draw^ him closer to his God, purify his morals, ele- 
vate his soul and unfold to his view the sublime Truths contained in the 
Secret Doctrine. It will initiate him into the Wisdom of the ancient 
Mysteries and enable him to understand the teachings of Buddha, Zara- 
thustra, Hermes, Confucius, Pythagoras, Orpheus, Socrates, Plato, in fact 
all the ancient philosophers of every age, who taught their pupils and 
followers a knowledge of God, Man and Nature, through a glorious 
symbology. These early philosophers threw aside all dogmas and creeds 
and awakened the dormant intellectual qualifications of their students 
by song, symbols and impressive exhibitions, which aroused their 
imagination and brought into use the latent faculties of thinking for 
themselves. 

NoW', my dear Brothers and Friends, I desire that each and every one 
of you shall have aroused within yourselves these latent faculties of under- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 347 

standing now dormant within you ; faculties that will enable each and 
every one of }'ou to thoroughly comprehend those sublime and glorious 
symbols that permeate our beloved fraternity, so that you may live to 
learn and learn to know and meditate upon those profound Metaphysical, 
Philosophical and Theosophical emblems that we see in every degree of 
our beloved Scottish Rite. It is a duty we owe to ourselves and our fel- 
low man and Brother to earnestly study, until we thoroughly comprehend 
the profound philosophy which permeates our beloved fraternity. In com- 
prehending the full depth of its sublime teachings we shall realize that it 
is our Duty to enlighten and instruct our brother by the wayside, by 
showing him not only their Ineffable beauties, but to point out the path 
which will lead him on to a knowledge of himself and higher planes of 
spiritual unfoldment. 

THE WHITE APRON. 

I want no Fleece of Gold. 
The symbol of fabled, fruitless quest, 
To wear such now were but an idle jest, 

Worn out and old. 

Give me no Eagle Roman, 
Type of dominion, badge of servitude ; 
No Emperor rules here ; however good, 

He is but human. 

No Garter, and no Star — 
Of old-world rank and wealth the symbols these, 
A pompous show the multitude to please ; 

Leave such afar. 

No Prince or Potentate 
Shall ever place his Order on my breast ; 
I would not choose to kneel at his behest 

Or on him to wait. 

I serve no sceptered king, 
I know not how to crouch at others' feet ; 
It is not thus, I trow, that Masons meet — • 

My apron bring! 



348 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

This lambskin, soft and white, 

Means brotherhood witli neither guile nor strife • 

Means single-hearted purity of life — 

Our actions right. 

— Sydney Free Mason. 

The Masonic Apron worn in the Blue Lodge should be made from a 
pure, unspotted white lamb skin, for white in every country and in every 
age has ever been an emblem of innocence and purity ; in consequence 
of this fact Masonry has ever preserved this color and emblem from time 
immemorial. It has been used from the threshold to the summit of each 
and every degree of our most illustrious fraternit}^ The symbol of a 
perfect square stirmounted by a triaugle is far older than the Babylonian 
or Egyptian Mysteries, and a knowledge of this most profound symbol 
will instruct and lead us on to the true meaning of the wise exhortation 
of the Delphic Oracle ^'' Knoiv t/iysel/y 

The white leather Apron should be free from all garniture or device 
of any kind. It shoiild never be substituted by silk, satin, fine linen or 
any other rich material, neither should it be decorated with rosettes or 
gold and silver trimmings, but just a simple, plain white lamb skin, with 
no distinctive decoration upon it. The only distinguishing feature 
about it should be the manner in which it is worn. 

The Neophyte, on being invested with this sublime symbol, is taught 
to wear it with the bib or triangle fully displayed above the square, while 
in the second degree we find that the descent has been made and the 
apron, as now worn, represents a perfect square. In the next 
degree the ascent begins and we find the left hand corner of the apron 
changed, thus demonstrating to the Aspirant that the higher spiritual 
forces are beginning to dominate the lower animal propensities within, 
thus entirely changing the shape of the apron from the square to. the 
triangle. 

Now as the candidate advances into the higher degrees there are 
certain colors and decorations placed upon the apron, as distinguishing 
marks, and these various devices and decorations are always symbolical of 
. the profound teachings that underlie the beautiful and profoitnd cere- 
monies. Masonry is a " progressive science," and after the Neoph3^te has 
demonstrated that he has thoroughly learned the first lesson taught and 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 349 

is keeping his promise, by endeavoring, with all his will and energy to 
subdue his passions and improve himself in Masonry, then and then 
only, is he permitted to place a distinguishing mark upon the spot- 
less emblem by wearing it according to the ancient customs of the 
fraternity. 

The Masonic apron is composed of a square and a triangle. The 
fiirst represents the Lower Quaternary or animal man, while the Triangle 
with the point turned upwards, as in the Entered Apprentice degree, 
represents the Upper Triad, the imperishable part of man. Man is a 
sevenfold evolving human being, whose physical body is composed of a 
mass of living elemental units, that are vibrating within their cells, ever 
coming and going, continually changing, but ever preserving the body 
in the self-same mould, or form, that it received from the Hiranyagarbha 
and Tahbic Elementals. 

The Seven Principles of Man are in their exoteric classification; ist. 
The Physical Body. 2d. The Astral Body. 3d. The Life Princi- 
ple. 4th. Kama. 5th. Manas. 6th. Buddhi. 7th. Atma. (The 
order in which I have named the Principles is from Matter to Spirit.) 

We will now consider these various principles and write upon them 
so that you, my dear friends and Brothers, maj^ be enabled to under- 
stand the true meaning that underlies the profound symbology of the 
Masonic apron. 

The Physical body oe Man, th.& first of the Seven Principles con- 
tains within itself all the various organs necessary for the development 
of the other principles and its own existence, and is built of the self-same 
material as all the other forms that are manifest to our physical senses, 
and is what the Hindu calls Prakriti or Matter. Now this Prakriti that 
goes to make up the physical body of Man is the very same kind of 
" sfitff" that builds the waving corn, the rippling brook, the meadow 
and the mountain, the grasses of the field, or the dust and stones that we 
tramp beneath our feet. All are alike, and there is no difference 
between the material moleclues of the animal, or vegetable, mineral 
or man. They are all alike in essence and the only differentiation 
between them is their shape, for the molecules that go toward the 
upbuilding of one form are chemical compounds that are to be found in 
all others. 



350 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Both the Animal and the Vegetable kingdom are intimately related, 
one to the other, and whatever the plant has selected from the darkness 
of the earth or the surrounding atmosphere, is transferred and assimilated 
by Man, and the self-same atoms manifesting themselves in the mole- 
cular forms of the animals and vegetables of bygone ages, are the very 
same kind of cells vibrating in the organisms of our own bodies to-day. 

" The molecule has in it the Seven Principles, in their Prakritic 
manifestations. As man, as a whole, contains every element that is 
found in the universe, and as there is nothing in the Macrocosm that is 
not in the Microcosm, so every molecule is, in its turn, the mirror of its 
universe, Man. It is this which renders man alone capable of conceiving 
the universe on this plane of existence ; he has in him the Macrocosm 
and the Microcosm." 

Man's Physical Body has its seven aspects, each aspect representing 
a Principle; then each of these has its own seven sub-divisions, each sub- 
division in its turn representing a Principle ; and we have the " forty- 
nine fires '' as seen in the Ph3'sical Body. It is because of this intricate 
correspondence, carried out in every detail, that men will ultimately be 
able to come into contact with every realm of being in the Universe. 

Man may be studied from the various aspects above mentioned to a 
very great advantage by the student who is searching for more Light and 
a knowledge of himself, because each aspect represents a different princi- 
ple, and, therefore, in his studying those different aspects or principles 
he will discover that his consciousness will function on these various 
aspects or planes of existence, states, or conditions of being. If he has 
aroused their latent forces and made them active and subservient to his 
Will, then he can pass from one plane to another and function upon 
just as many as he has brought into activity. There are not many men 
who can function upon all planes, but the potentiality of being enabled 
to do so is latent within every man. 

Annie Besant explains consciousness working on different planes 
very nicely in her " Seven Principles," pages 6 and 7, wherein she saj^s : 
" A man may be conscious on the physical plane that is in his physical 
body, feeling hunger and thirst, the pain of a blow or a cut. But let the 
man be a soldier in the heat of battle and his consciousness will be 
centered in his passions, his emotions, and he may suffer a wound 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 351 

without knowing it, his consciousness being away from the physical 
plane, acting on the plane of passions and emotions ; when the excite- 
ment is over, consciousness will pass back to the physical, and he will feel 
the pain of his wound. Let the man be a philosopher, and as he ponders 
over some knotty problem he will lose all consciousness of bodily wants, 
of emotions, of love and hatred ; his consciousness will have passed to the 
plane of intellect, he will be " Abstracted," z. e., drawn away from consid- 
erations pertaining to his bodily life and fixed on the plane of thought. 

" Thus may a man live in these several conditions, one part or 
another of his nature being thrown into activity at any given time and 
an understanding of what man is, of his nature, of his powers, his possi- 
bilities, will be reached more easily and assimilated more usefully if he 
has studied along these clearly defined lines, than if he be left without 
analysis, a mere confused bundle of qualities and states." 

According to the exoteric teachings of the ancient Egyptians Man 
was composed of Four Principles : — ist. The Physical Body. and. The 
Ka or Astral Body. 3rd. The Bi or Ba, or the Soul. 4th. The Khoo or 
or Luminous Spark, the God in Man (see Chap. XIII of this work.j 

Man, according to the Christian idea is composed of Body, Soul and 
Spirit, and yet, I am very sorry to say, that there are but very few who 
know the difference between the Soul and the Spirit, and in fact I believe 
this division into Body, Soul, and Spirit, has been kept separate from the 
general teachings of Christianity, because a careful investigation of the 
three-fold division would simply prove that instead of three, there would 
be found seven. 

Tke Astral Body or Linga Shariia is the second of the Seven Princi- 
ples of Man. It is composed of a far more subtle matter than that of the 
Physical Body, and is not perceptible to our ordinary senses, as it is made 
up of iVstral matter, a substance that is just beyond our physical senses, 
although Clairvoyants are enabled to see these bodies and describe them 
to us ; but we ourselves are unable to do so, because the matter of which 
they are composed is in a finer state than we can see or feel. 

The Linga Sharira is the exact duplicate of the Physical Body, like 
the Ka of the ancient Egyptians (described in Chap. XIII of this work.) 
It is often seen at spiritualistic meetings in so-called spirit manifestations, 
or materializations and in order that my readers may be enabled to under- 



352 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

stand the " Modus operandi " of the " spirit manifestations " I will 
say : 

The Linga Sharira is the vehicle of the Life forces for the Physical 
Body and draws from the great ocean of Jiva the Prana to support the body. 
It gathers up the necessary properties from the surrounding kingdoms to 
give its counterpart, the Physical Body, the necessary life forces and energy 
for its continued existence. " Life " cannot pass immediately and directly 
from the subjective to the objective, for nature passes gradually from 
sphere to sphere, overleaping none. The Linga Sharira serves as the in- 
termediary between Prana and the Sthula Sharira (Physical Body), 
drawing Life from the ocean of Jiva and pumping it into the Physical Body 
as Prana. For Life is in reality Divinity, Parabrahman, the Universal 
Deity. But in order that it may manifest on the physical plane it 
must be assimilated to the matter of that plane ; this cannot be done 
directly, as the purely physical is too gross, and thus it needs a vehicle, 
the Linga Sharira. 

If we should desire to investigate spirit manifestations we should go to 
some good spirit medium and watch very carefully the whole proceedings. 
The first thing we notice will be the medium going through a series of 
peculiar convulsive movements and twitchings of the various parts of the 
body, which very soon cease and the medium remains perfectly passive. 
Now, if we place our finger upon the medium's pulse we shall find it 
gradually dropping, and we will soon begin to realize that the life forces 
are leaving the physical in order to vitalize the Linga Sharira or Astral 
Body of the medium, which may now be seen oozing out from the left side 
of the body, in the shape of a greyish violet-colored vapor, that will gradu- 
ally form itself into a duplicate of the medium's body, feature for feature, 
and if left undisturbed will stand beside the medium, attached to the body 
by a very slender thread. 

If one goes to this meeting for the purpose of seeing some loved one 
who has passed away and if there should be no one present among the 
audience with a stronger will force than theirs, they will be enabled to 
mould the plastic Astral Bod}^ of the medium into any form they 
may desire and all those who are present will recognize the various forms 
as they are moulded by the will power alone. In proof of this fact let me 
quote you from Annie Besant's "Seven Principles," page 13. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. B53 

" The Linga Sharira plays a great part in ' spiritualistic ' phenomena. 
Here again the clairvoyant, seeing on the Astral plane, can help us. 
A clairvoyant can often see the Linga Sharira oozing out of the left side 
of the medium, and it is this ethereal double which often appears as the 
' materialized spirit,' easily moulded into various shapes b}^ the thought- 
currents of the sitters, and gaining strength and vitality as the medium 
sinks into a deep trance." 

The Countess Wachtmeister, who is clairvoyant, saj'S that she has 
seen the same " spirit '' recognized as a near relative or friend by differ- 
ent sitters, each of whom saw it, according to his expectations, while to 
her own eyes it was the mere double of the medium. So again H. P. 
Blavatsky told me that when she was at the Eddy homestead, watching 
the remarkable series of phenomena there produced, she deliberately 
moulded the " spirit '' which appeared into the likeness of persons known 
to herself and to no one else present, and the other sitters saw the types 
she produced by her own will-power, moulding the plastic astral matter 
of the Medium's Linga Sharira. And this Principle, in the form that we 
now find it as the duplicate of the medium's physical body and separated 
from it, is devoid of consciousness and perfectly senseless on the phj'sical 
plane, although it contains the real organs of our senses. 

I have spoken of this Principle as the centre of sensation Chapter X 
of this work. There is one thing I wish m}' readers to thoroughl}' un- 
derstand and which is that the Ethereal double, and in fact Quaternary 
Man, is composed of molecules that are in-souled by Atoms ; while the 
Upper Triad is atomic, containing all the potential forces of the lower 
Principles and at the same time all the higher spiritual forces that belong 
exclusively to Atina^ BuddJii^ Manas. I have already given 3'ou an ac- 
count of the death of the physical body in Chapter X ; but here let me 
give you an idea of what death means for this Ethereal Double, the second 
Principle of Man : 

The phj'sical and the Ethereal Body are both on the same plane, 
and are both molecular in their constitution. They are interdependent 
one to the other, therefore death to the phj^sical bod}^ means the de- 
struction of the other. Just before death occurs the Ethereal counterpart 
oozes forth from the left side of the physical body, in the manner de- 
scribed above, and wben the last breath has been drawn and death claims 
23 



354 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

it, the thread that links the two together has broken, and those who are 
watching exclaim "he is dead." The Ethereal Double, now freed from 
its physical counterpart still remains with it, hovering around in its im- 
mediate neighborhood, just as the Ka of the ancient Egyptians (as 
already described), or as ghosts are often seen by people, either in the 
grave-yard or near the vault wherein the body has been deposited. It is 
very often seen revisiting the chamber where the death occurred and thus 
continues to act until the physical body disintegrates and becomes the 
''dust of the earth. Just as fast as the physical body decays and passes 
away the Ethereal double fades out with it until all that remains of either 
is faint glimmering violet-colored lights hovering over the graves of the 
dead, only seen by clairvoyants. 

Before finishing on the Linga Sharira, I desire that you, my dear 
readers, should know that every Principle has its seven aspects, as I have 
hereinbefore stated ; but, in addition to this every cell and organ in the 
body has its seven component parts, and the Principles are related in 
themselves to some special organ of the body. The Spleen belongs 
especially to this Second Principle, and like all the others, have their cor- 
respondences not only in every cell but in all the great organs of the 
body ; for instance : The Brain is the centre of Intellectual Conscious- 
ness, having seven divisions, each one of which corresponds to one of the 
Seven Principles of the human bod}/, and 3'et as a whole corresponds to 
Psycho-Intellectual Man. This assertion or statement is a positive fact 
and proves the great ' Truth " that every molecule is a mirror of the 
universe, and every microcosm the mirror of a macrocosm. 

The Life Principle, " Prana," is the third of the Seven Princi- 
ples. Everything that exists in the Kosmos is bathed in an ocean of 
Jiva, or Life, and every form that we see around us, is permeated with 
its essence. The earth itself and all the stars glittering in the infinitude 
of space, are immersed in this great ocean. But that portion of Jiva that 
is in Man, and which permeates his whole being, is strictly speaking, 
Prana, or the " Breath of Life." It is what the Hebrew calls "■ Nephesch^'''' 
and w^hich at ovir birth is breathed into our nostrils with \h& fourth Princi- 
ple and these two blended together, constitute the Vital Spark, giving in- 
stinctual life to both animal and Quaternary Man. Prana is an infinitesi- 
mal portion of the great ocean of Jiva, manifesting itself in molecular 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. '355 

forms and the Linga Sharira is the Upadhi or Vehicle through which this 
Principle acts. 

H. P. Blavatsky defines this vehicle as : " Upadhi means that through 
which a force acts. The word ' vehicle ' is sometimes used to convey the 
same idea. If ' force ' be regarded as acting, ' matter ' is the Upadhi 
through which it acts. Thus the Lower Manas is the Upadhi through 
which the Higher can work ; the Linga Sharira is the Upadhi through 
which Prana can work. The Sthula Sharira (physical body) is the 
Upadhi for all the Principles acting on the physical plane.'' 

Nature is all one piece, and yet a unity, expressed in variety. All her 
changing differentiations and most extraordinary manifestations orginate 
from the same source. Rock, Plant, Animal, and Man have the same 
Life, differing only in degree ; but the force is not so distinct in the lower 
as it is in the higher forms. A dog has the same life as the collar he 
wears upon his neck, or the house that shelters him from the sun or rain; 
for the simple reason that there is only One Life and everj^thing' is 
bathed in it ; but in the dog it is manifested in a different manner from 
the collar, or the house, on account of their organic structure. 

"All is life, and every atom of even mineral dust is a life, though 
beyond our comprehension and perception, because it is outside the range 
of the laws known to those who reject occultism." Nature streams' in 
one continuous flow from the Absolute ; every individual atom, even of 
her chaos, is peremeated by an adequate mind ; every atom has its life 
and guiding directing force or energy. 

Life is stratified, and but dimly sensed in the mineral and stone, and 
yet every particle of both mineral and stone are in a state of active vibra- 
tion. It is filled with motion in the plant, and stands upon the boundary 
of instinct ; while in the animal we find it filled with instinctual life and 
standing upon the very threshold of reason; but in, Man we find the 
intellectual and truly spiritual dominating the animal propensities, 
which, with his reasoning faculties fully aroused, he can step across the 
threshold, lift the veil and stand within the presence of his God. 

In him are the potential forces that will make him the highest being 
in Nature's evolutionary processes. He has climbed from out the dust of 
the earth upon every rung of the ladder of life. His body has been built 
from the bones and sinews of all below him ; he has fed on all things; 



356 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

and existed in all forms from primordial matter to intellectual Man. 
The gases concentrate their forces in him, the very wind, rain, storm 
and sunshine hold him in solution. One of our most eminent scientists 
said: "He knows of Ox, Mastodon, Bird, and Plant, because he has 
just come out of them, and part of the egg-shell still adheres.'' The 
plowman, the plow, and the furrow, as well as the flowers and fruits of 
the field, the trees and the sunshine, which invigorates and stimulates 
growth, are all of the same " stuff." Prana or Life circulates throughout 
the physical body by way of the arteries and veins, impregnates every 
corpuscle with its life-giving forces, or energy, and reaches every part of 
the body in order to vivify and strengthen it, the heart being the medium 
through which it acts ; compelled to action by the L,inga Sharira, which 
is the vehicle of " these Pranic elements, the Devourers, which build up 
and destroy the human Body." It passes through the arterial system in 
all its wonderful ramifications, back through the veins into the heart and 
lungs again, and is continually forcing renewed Life and energy through 
all parts of the body. 

Kama, or The Desire Body is the fourth of the Seven Principles 
and completes our Quaternary Man^ the emblem or symbol of which is the 
lower part of the badge of a Mason, a square. It (Kama) is often called 
the Animal Soul. 

This Principle contains all our emotions and passions, such as love, 
anger, hate, jealousy, sexual desire, etc., all of which belong to the 
Kamic plane. This Principle is dual in its nature, for it has a desire for 
good and a desire for evil. It is continually lusting after things in order 
to gratify its animal passional nature and propensities. 

What is known as desires of the Body have their origin in Tkotight^ 
for thought occurs before the desire is formed. But this subject will be 
treated in the next Principle, " Manas." When evil tendencies and 
impulses have been thoroughly impressed on the physical nature, they 
cannot be at once reversed. The molecules of the body have been, set in 
a Kamic direction and — though they have sufficient intelligence to dis- 
cern between things on their own plane, t. e. to avoid things harmful to 
themselves — they cannot understand a change of direction, the impulse 
to which comes from a higher plane. If they are too suddenly and too 
violently forced into a reverse action, madness or death will result. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 357 

" The Kama during life does not form a Body whicli can be sepa- 
rated from the physical Body. It is intermolecular, answering molecule 
for molecule to the physical Body and inseparable from it molecularly. 
Thus it is a form, yet not a form ; a form within the physical Body, but 
incapable of being projected outward as a form. This is the Inner, or 
Astral Man, in whom are located the centres of sensation, the psychic 
senses, and on whose intermolecular rapport witb the physical Body all 
sensation and purposive action depends. At death, every cell and mole- 
cule gives out this essence, and from it with the dregs of the Heranya- 
garbha is formed, the separate Kama Rnpa ; but this can never come 
during life." 

With Kama we have built up Quaternary Man, the animal pregnant 
with instinct ; but devoid of reason it is simply a brute, as it were, that 
dwells in the house that has been fitted up for the indwelling of the Mind. 
It is now simply the personality, although a perfect entit}^, for it has a 
body with its ethereal double, its life, animal soul, and all the passions 
and desires of the lower animal, with just enough sense or instinct to eat 
when it is hungry, seek shelter from the rain or storm, and yet, with all 
its instinctual nature fully aroused, it is only an animal. It has no 
intellectual reasoning faculties and can never develop above the animal, 
until its Lord and Master, the Divine Thinker, enters fully into the 
house that has been prepared for it, and by its presence makes it Man 
and gives it both Mind and Will. 

Manas, The Thinker or Mind is the fifth of the Seven Principles. 
In reaching the Upper Triad and Manas we come to one of the most 
difficult and complicated of the Principles to understand, more especially 
is this so of Lower Manas, which we will consider as a Principle in 
order to study its workings in the Lower Quaternary. 

One of the most important points about the Lower Manas is to com- 
prehend the relationship existing between it and the Higher. 

Manas is a Sanskrit word and comes from Man, the root of the Verb 
to Think, and in this we will call Manas The Thinker, instead of Mind, 
because this fijth Principle is the Re-incarnating Ego, the immortal, indi- 
vidual Man, that is described in the "Voice of the Silence" page 31, in the 
exhortation addressed to the Neophyte for initiation : " Have perseverance 
as one who doth for evermore endure. Thy shadows (personalities) live 



358 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

and vanish ; that which is in thee shall live for ever, that which in thee 
hiows, for it is knowledge, is not fleeting life ; it is the man that was, that 
is, and will be, for whom the hour shall never strike." 

Madame H. P. Blavatsky gives a very clear description of this in the 
" Key to Theosophy," page 1S3-4 : " Try to imagine a ' Spirit,' a celestial 
Being, whether we call it bj^ one name or another, divine in its essential 
nature, yet not pure enough to be one with the All, and having, in order 
to achieve this, to so purify its nature as to finally gain that goal. It 
can do so only by passing individually and personally^ i. e.^ spiritually 
and ph3'sically through every experience and feeling that exists in the 
manifold or differentiated Universe. It has, therefore, after having 
gained sucli experience in the lower kingdoms and having ascended 
higher and still higher with every rung on the ladder of being, to pass 
through every experience on the human planes. In its very essence it is 
Thought, and is therefore called in its plurality Manasa putra ' the Sons 
of the (Universal) Mind.' 

" This individualized ' Thought ' is what we Theosophists call the 
real human Ego, the thinking entity imprisoned in a case of flesh and 
bones. This is surely a Spiritual Entity, not Matter, and such Entities 
are the incarnating Egos that inform the bundle of animal matter called 
mankind and whose names are Manasa or ' Minds.' But once impris- 
oned, or incarnate, their essence becomes dual ; that is to sa};-, the rays of 
the Eternal divine Mind, considered as individual entities, assume a two- 
fold attribute which is {a) their essential inherent characteristics, heaven- 
aspiring mind {Higher Manas), and (b) the human quality of thinking, or 
animal cogitation, rationalized, owing to the superiority of the human 
brain, the A'^?W(7-tending or Lower Manas. One gravitates toward Buddhi, 
the other tending downward, to the seat of passions and animal desires." 

Now the house (Quaternary Man) that has been slowly built up for 
this " personal Ego," does not fully receive its glorious tenant at birth, 
like " the breath of Life," Kama-Prana, the " personality " is not ^^divid- 
ualized until the child has reached the sixth or seventh 3'ear of its age ; 
but after that time our Thinker " dons his coat of Skin " and then he or 
she is held morally responsible for all their acts in Thought or Deed, and 
passes under the Law of Karma " before which period, even according to 
the canon of the Church and Law, no child is deemed responsible. In 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 359 

the Greek Eastern Church no child is allowed to go to confession before 
the age of seven, after which he is considered to have reached the age of 
reason." 

Manas itself is a pure ray of Divine Light from the World Soul, in 
which there is no differentiation. It belongs to a higher plane than the 
gross molecular matter composing the form of Quaternary Man, and 
consequently cannot manifest in the physical Bod}'. In order that it may 
be enabled to do so Manas becomes dual by evolving a Ray from its own 
Divine Light, clothing itself with Astral matter and entering into the 
human tabernacle, and thus becoming Lower Manas, whose vehicle is the 
Brain. 

Its subdivisions correspond and are the organs of the subdivisions of 
the Thinker, and the convolutions of the cerebral hemisphere are shaped 
by the action of Thought which is being continually changed into far 
more complicated convolutions by the Thinker himself. It is Lower 
Manas that transforms animal man into the thinking, reasoning, human 
being. 

Our Thinker has now reincarnated, clothing itself in a new person- 
ality, and in doing so has taken upon itself the sting of death, for this 
descent of spirit into matter is the Metaphysical, Theosophical and 
Philosophical conception of death. The very fact of it having passed into 
another personality brings with it a second death and that is the death in 
Kama Loka, or at least that particular portion of it wdiich remains in 
the Kama Rupa, for just as soon as death takes possession of the physical 
body and this incarnation is finished Kama-Manas withdraws itself from 
the body and clothes itself with astral matter, that will have a conscious 
existence on this plane for a period of one hundred and fifty years. At 
the end of this period all of the unsullied portions of the IManasic Ray has 
disentangled itself from the Kama Rupa, taking with it all of the experi- 
ences gained during the earth life which are worthy of assimilation to the 
Higher Ego, and thus Manas again becomes One and the Kama Rupa 
eventually breaks up, leaving behind it a record of its misdeeds, the 
Tanhic Elementals. 

It is during earth life, when the Divine Ray has descended into and 
incarnated in the flesh that it finds itself crucified between two thieves, 
for Kama tries to drag it down to its own animal, passional plane, or 



360 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

state, and at the same time its Father in Heaven is endeavoring to 
influence it to higher hopes and aspirations, to purer spiritual planes of 
Paradise. 

This is where the battle rages between good and evil, or God and the 
Devil, and the battle-ground within man himself. Man receives immor- 
tality through the conquest of his own animal passional nature, therefore 
you must recognize the necessity for each and every human being to 
learn to subdue and purify Kama, so that its force and energy may be 
directed by its Divine Master Manas, for if this animal within us be so 
trained that the material instincts within us are killed, and it becomes 
subject to Divine Will, then will we be assured that we shall be at one 
with our Father in Heaven, and like Christ, know that He and / are One. 

Now do not think for one moment that by applying the forces of the 
subjugated Kama for the advancement of the intellectual qualifications 
latent within us that we kill out selfishness ; we do not, for if you only 
pause to consider this fact, you will find that the more intellectual you 
desire to become, the less spiritual you will be, for intellect by itself is 
purely selfishness, for this reason intellectual development is a cold, 
heartless desire to gratify the personal /, and it is pure and unadulterated 
selfishness, with not a spark of Divine Love or Compassion. 

" True knowledge is of Spirit, and in Spirit alone, and cannot be 
acquired in any other way, except through the region of the higher mind, 
the only plane from which we can penetrate the depths of the all-pervad- 
ing Absoluteness. It is plainly to be seen that a man may be a morally 
good man and very intellectual, and at the same time not have the faintest 
glimmer of spirituality about him, in consequence of which, at death, he 
will be lost in the whirlpool of Kama Loka." 

BuDDHi is the sixtli of the Seven Principles of Man. It has no func- 
tion on this physical plane, only when it is united to Manas, then it becomes 
Divine Consciousness. Buddhi is in itself so much higher than physical 
man that it cannot possibly enter into direct relationship with him^, and 
only through and by its reflection can it manifest itself as Lower Manas. 
Buddhi is the Upadhi of the One Eternal Essence ; while Manas is 
the Vahana of Mahat the first principle of Universal Intelligence, Divine 
Ideation, and yet they are both of the same Eternal Essence of the One. 
As such they will be — ever exist, and neither can they ever be annihilated 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 361 

or destroyed, either in essence or consciousness, like the physical person- 
ality with its Linga Sharira and the animal soul with its Kamic elements 
and Kama Rupa, all of whom came from the realm of illusion (Maya), 
and they will most certainly return again to the realm from which they 
emanated, and vanish like snow in the hot rays of a summer's sun. 

Atma or Atman is the seventh Principle which completes the sub- 
lime and profound symbol of the badge of a Mason, or white leather apron. 
The last three Principles are symbolized by the triangle above the square. 

H. P. Blavatsky states in the " Key to Theosophy :" " Atma is no 
individual property of any man, but is the Divine Essence which has no 
body, no form, which is imponderable, invisible and indivisible, that which 
does not exist and yet /^, as the Buddhists say of Nirvana. It only over- 
shadows the mortal ; that which enters into him, and pervades the whole 
body, being only its Omnipresent rays, or light radiated through Buddlii^ 
its vehicle and direct emanation." 

Let me quote you from " Mystic Masonry," by Brother J. D. Buck, 
32° : " Atma, Manas, Buddhi represents Father, Son and Holy Ghost. 
When Christ ' ascended to the Father ' he raised his consciousness to the 
seventh or Atmic Plane, and became in fact (no longer in essence only) 
One with God.'' These three principles in man compose the Spiritual 
Soul ; the Immortal part of man ; while Atma-Buddhi constitute the 
Higher-Self, the latent or potential God in man. The lower quaternary 
Body, Life-Principle, Form-Body and Kama (or Desire) are symbolized 
by a square. To make it plain, let us say that the triangle incarnates 
in the square; that is, the Soul (spiritual) "descends into matter." The 
Body is the vehicle of Life ; Life is the vehicle of the Astral Body ; the 
Astral Body is the vehicle of Kama ; Kama is the vehicle of Manas ; Manas 
is the vehicle of Buddhi ; and Buddhi is the vehicle of Atma. This is the 
orderly relation or sequence of the principles. But as already shown, 
man is not a mere aggregation of principles, any more than he is a 
conglomerate aggregation of atoms, molecules or cells. Just as atoms 
form molecules, molecules cells, cells tissues, tissues organs and organs 
the whole body ; so the Principles, while preserving a similar orderly 
sequence in relation to each other, are at the same time organized in rela- 
tion to the whole. That is, the Ego, the Thinker, unites with its vehicle, 
the Body." 



ilsramitrs of ^afefearafj-lisfjt-f^letrum-^fje 
JTagum-ILabjjrintfj. 



363 



Vhevc t9 a land where 'CtTne no count can hecp, 
CQherc works of men imperishable seem; 
Slhere, through Death's barren solitude, doth gleam 

tlndying hope for them that sow and reap: 

"Yea, land of life, where death is but a deep 
ttlarm slumber, a communicable dream, 
CClhcrc, from the silent grave far voices stream 

Of those who tell their secrets in their sleep. 

— N. D. Rawnsley. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 365 




CHAPTER XVI. 

PYRAMIDS OF SAKKARAH-LISHT— MEDUM-THE FAYUM-LABYRINTH. 

HE Pyramids of Egypt, at Gizeh, situated in the most northern part 
of the site of ancient Memphis, received treatment in the eleventh 
Chapter of this work, while the reader will be taken in this Chapter to 
the extreme part of its southern line or boundary and visit the Pyramids 
of Sakkarah, Dashur, etc. 

Having already described the Serapeum and the tomb of Tih, the 
necropolis of Sakkarah, which takes its name from the village located 
here, will constitute a continuation of my narrative. It is the oldest and 
at the same time the most modern of the cemeteries of ancient Memphis. 
It is four and one-half miles long, with an average breadth of three- 
fourths of a mile, and like the cemeter}^ at Gizeh, properly speaking, 
belonged to the ancient capital of Lower Egypt {Memphis). The whole 
of this vast necropolis has been thoroughly searched by all kinds of 
people and exploring expeditions. Notwithstanding this fact the inde- 
fatigable efforts of Mariette Bay were rewarded by the discovery of the 
Serapeum as well as many other priceless relics of ancient Pharaonic 
History. 

In our visit to the ruins of Memphis and to the Necropolis of 
Sakkarah we hired our donkeys at Bedrashen, a distance of about fifteen 
miles from Cairo, carrying our tents, provisions, etc., along with us, to 
enable us to camp just where we felt like, and remain as long as we 
desired, at any particular place, that we might explore the ruins of this 
ancient metropolis at our leisure. 

After selecting our donkeys we started out across a dusty, sandy 
flat towards the little white-washed depot of Bedrashen. We rode across 
the track, and passed the squalid mud-hovels amid the date palms that 
composed the village, and rode on through a motley throng of villagers 
who had gathered in our path, shouting loudly for " baksheesh," while 



-66 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

others were trying to dispose of their fruits and water, which they had for 
sale. We supplied ourselves abundantly with the fruit and continued on 
our way along the winding road leading to the celebrated necropolis of 
Sakkarah. 

As we passed through the village of Bedrashen we noticed immense 
numbers of pigeons flying from their quarters on the walls of the square 
towers that were built expressly for their nesting places. As we rode 
along, shouting and laughing at the motley crowd, the dogs ran out and 
added their yelping chorus to swell the noise, for they ran beside us, 
barking loudly as we passed by. We soon left village and yelping curs 
behind and rode on through palm groves, fertile fields, and ponds of 
stagnant water, catching ever anon glimpses of the Pyramids of Gizeh, 
away off in the distance, and the mounds and groves of Mitraheny close 
at hand. We stopped to examine the statues of Rameses II., and con- 
tinued our journey on towards Sakkarah. Leaving Mitraheny on our 
right we rode straight along until we turned sharp off to the right, 
skirting the village of Sakkarah, until we came to the regular camping 
ground, near the sycamore and well, a short distance north of the village, 
from which the Necropolis takes its name. Here we camped upon the 
site of one 'of the most ancient cities of the world's history. 

We pitched our tents and fixed things up very comfortably, 
spending the night around our camp-fire, under one of the most magnifi- 
cent moon and starlit nights I have ever seen in Egypt. As we sat 
there we chatted and talked of the grandeur of ancient Egypt, her lost 
arts and sciences, the decadence of her philosophies, and the wondrous 
knowledge possessed by the people by whom the Pyramids were built. 
These giant shapes were so clearly outlined in the silvery sheen of light 
softly falling around us, for the moon was at the full, the stars were as 
bright as electric lights, and as we stood looking around the voiceless 
city of the dead a picture of the scene was impressed upon my brain 
that will endure as long as life shall last. We awoke in t];ie early 
morning and found the sun lighting up with rainbow tints the scenery 
around us, and the odor of the coffee and our morning meal came float- 
ing into the tent, giving us an appetite which was soon satisfied. After 
breakfast the shagg}^ little donkeys were brought around, and we were 
again soon riding off to the southwest, towards the southern group of 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 367 

ruins at Sakkarah, among which are the Mastaba Farun and other 
tombs, as well as the ruined Pyramid of Pepi II. 

In riding across this part of Memphis we find a vast difference in the 
debris under foot from that at Gizeh, for there it was of a very coarse, 
sandy, gravelly appearance, with very little else to be seen, but here in 
Sakkarah we can find all kinds of things, such as scraps of mummy 
cloths, bandages, fragments of mummy flesh, in fact the whole plateau 
is covered with relics of all kinds, from human bones to beads, scraps of 
pottery, broken funeral statuettes, etc. 

It was a lovely morning as we started out on our way to visit the 
ruins of some of the most ancient monuments in the Necropolis of 
Memphis ; stopping here and there before some point of interest, and 
seeing relics of a prehistoric civilization all around us, scattered about 
in utter confusion ; we pass the ruins of an ancient Pyramid, close beside 
our path, and yet we did not stop to examine it because we wanted to 
look at and explore the ruined temples and tombs further on, which we 
deemed far worthier of our time and attention. There are quite a 
large number of tombs in this vicinity which have been opened up, care- 
fully examined, and carefully covered again, for the purpose of pre- 
serving their interior decorations from the deteriorating effects of the air 
and the destructive hands of the vandal tourists that swarm through this 
ancient city of the dead, as well as through the whole of the Nile valley. 
We made our way directly towards the Mastaba Fanin, which was 
originally opened and thoroughly explored by Mariette Bey, who 
believed it to be the resting place, or tomb, of King Unas, on account of 
some of the stones used in its construction having the name " Unas " 
inscribed upon them. 

It is a kind of an oblong structure, built with splayed walls, the 
entrance to which is on the north side ; but is now closed with barred 
gates and fastened, so that we were unable to gain admission to examine 
the interior. There are quite a number of ruined tombs and other 
structures in the immediate vicinity as well as numberless mummy 
pits. Close by is the Pyramid of Pepi II, in a very dilapidated condition, 
so much so that we gave up the idea of exploring it as the undertaking 
was considered too dangerous for us to make the attempt. We, therefore, 
mounted our donkeys and rode off in a northerly direction, that we might 



368 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

examine the Pyramid of Seker-em-sa-f, son of Pepi I, and elder brother of 
Pepi II, whose mummy was taken from this Pyramid in 1881, and con- 
sidered the oldest known mummy of to-day. (For an account see Chapter 
XIII of this work.) 

We visited all the Pyramids in the Pepi group and did not attempt 
to explore an}^ of them excepting the one of Pepi I, into which we 
descended, and were well repaid for the labor, as the construction of the 
interior is widely different from those of Gizeh, or any other Pyramid we 
had heretofore examined. The hieroglyphic inscriptions here are of a 
pale bluish green color, as well as the interior decorations, and they are 
well worth seeing ; but it was very dangerous to go prospecting around 
in the interior of this dilapidated monument, consequently we concluded 
to go over to some ruins which could be seen a short distance from us, off 
to the south-east, proving on close inspection to be the remains of a 
ruined Pyramid and the debris of numerous tombs, etc. Here we 
stopped awhile and hunted among the ruins to see if we could find some 
relics of these ancient people, in the shape of scarabs, or funeral statuettes, 
but after grubbing around for an hour or more I found a verj' small 
statuette some fragments of opalescent glass, a few beads, and a few 
pieces of ve'ry fine mummy cloth. Becoming satisfied with what we saw 
here we rode back to our camp, situated about three-quarters of an 
hour's ride to the north-east. 

On returning to camp, weary and tired, we dismounted and soon 
refreshed ourselves with a good shower bath and found that our appetites 
had been very much sharpened by our fatiguing ride around this most 
remarkable plateau. Our welcome meal was soon served, to which we 
all did ample justice, when we lit our cigars and entered into a lengthy 
discussion on the religions and philosophies of the people whose remains 
were scattered around the length and breadth of this necropolis of 
Sakkarah, for from one end to the other may be seen the flesh and bones, 
as well as fragments of the cerement clothes that enwrapped them, 
evidencing rifled graves, and desecration of the dead. 

The various tombs examined since we came into this country bear 
ample evidence that these ancient people were most assuredly filled with 
the idea of Death and a Future Life. It is very certain they were not 
Atheists, for they believed devoutly in God and a Life to come. This 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 369 

belief is in fact to be found in all religions tbrougbout tbe world, but it 
was specially taught by the ancient Kgyptians. The paintings upon the 
walls, in the interior, are evidences of their belief in a life to come ; but 
we must remember that in the examination of the pictures upon the 
walls, we are not in the tomb proper, but only in the guest-chamber, far 
above the tomb itself. (See Chapter XIII of this work.) 

The mummy was deposited in a pit below, while its double, the Ka, 
was supposed to take a great interest in all things earthly, and they 
thoroughly believed that it would be filled with joy in the success of their 
sons and daughters, after they themselves had gone to Amenti and they 
loved to come back and see the pictures of their families reaping rich 
harvests from the fields they had carefully tilled during their lives. 

Just before sundown we saw and studied the very peculiar methods 
adopted by the sacred beetle of the ancient Egyptians The AteiicJms 
Sacer^ the celebrated Scarabseus of the ancient people. They believed 
that there were no females among these sacred insects and that in order 
to propagate their species the Scarab would enclose a life germ within a 
ball of clay or the slime of the Nile mud, that this insect would mould 
or form itself into a little round ball, after which, it would push it back- 
wards to the desired location and bury it in the sands of the desert and 
from this grave would arise another Beetle or Scarab that in due time 
would perform the self-same methods for the continuance of its species. 

The Scarabseus was esteemed a very sacred insect among the 
ancient Egyptians, they considered it an emblem of Immortality and a 
symbol of the Sun, which demonstrated Life, Death and the Re-incarna- 
tion of the Spirit. It was emblematical of the Sun, because, just as the 
Scarabasus pushed the germ of a Future Life in a round ball of dirt, the 
Sun pushed the Earth from West to East, making the sun, from the 
earth, apparently rise or re-incarnate in the East once in every twenty- 
four hours, which is symbolical of the return of the Spirit to thread itself 
and its various personalities upon the sutratma of many lives. We 
retired early, as we anticipated a long day's work on the morrow, in visit- 
ing the Step-Pyramid, as well as other points of interest, in this most 
extraordinary necropolis of Sakkarah and vicinity. 

In the morning we got up with the sun, took a slice of dry toast and 
a cup of coffee and went forth with our guns. Inside of an hour we 
24 



370 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

returned with between three and four dozen very fine quail and a nice lot 
of ducks, getting back in time for breakfast and an early start to the 
various places we had planned to visit. Mounting our little donkeys we 
went skurrying off to the North, riding over fragments of broken pot- 
tery, bricks, etc., with here and there large blocks of granite which once 
belonged to one of the most famous and populous cities of ancient Egypt. 
We rode up to the Pyramid of Unas which we found in a ruinous condi- 
tion, and would not have been able to have seen the interior of this mon- 
ument if it had not been for a party of Cook's tourists, who arrived there 
just about the same time we did and they having cards of admission and 
key to the iron gate, we were allowed to enter and examine the interior of 
this Pyramid with them. 

The entrance to it was originally closed with immense blocks of 
sandstone, which obstructions must have required a vast amount of time 
and labor to remove, that admittance might be gained into the interior. 
To-day the entrance is provided with an iron gate, to prevent people 
going in without permission and destroying the interior decorations and 
chipping off pieces from the sarcophagus, etc. The entrance leads us 
into a chamber running off from which are two others, one on each side 
of this first or entrance chamber. The two larger ones contain quite 
a number of well-preserved funeral inscriptions and in the one to the 
right we saw a granite sarcophagus close to the alabaster walls, adorned 
with very nice paintings of plain simple patterns, whose colors are nearly 
as bright to-day as when first placed there by the artist B. c. 3,333. We 
saw here in these chambers the same class of hieroglyphic inscriptions 
of a bluish green color as those described in the Pyramid of Pepi I, but 
with this difference they are not in sunk relief, but just simply incised. 

To the South and South-East of this Pyramid are the remains of the 
tombs of the various dynasties from the XVIII upward, to more modern 
times, but they have all been broken into and ransacked, for the purpose 
of gathering the priceless treasures and relics from their interiors, or to 
satisfy the curiosity of vandal explorers. To-day this plain is strewn 
with fragments of the dead, pieces of wood which formed the coffins, 
broken pottery, statuettes, mummy clothes, human bones, etc. Instead 
of rambling around trying to find a tomb that had not been examined 
before, we made our way to the largest and most celebrated monument of 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 371 

ttis group, the Step-Pyramid of Sakkarah, whicli is located about two 
hundred and fifty yards to the North-east of the Pyramid of Unas. 

It is not built with a regular slope like any of the other pyramids 
from base to summit, neither is it a perfect square, nor does it face the 
cardinal points of the universe, being built in six stages that recedes one 
into the other and diminishes in height as well as in breadth. The 
lowest step being thirty-seven feet high and the upper one twenty-nine 
feet, and all being about six feet wide. The extreme height of the struc- 
ture from the base to its summit is one hundred and sixty-seven feet. 
Much of this monument has been removed, possibly for building purposes 
in Cairo. The North and South sides measure three hundred and fifty- 
one feet two inches, and the East and West sides three hundred and 
ninety-three feet six inches, covering an area of a little over fifteen 
thousand square yards. 

This Pyramid differs from others from the fact that it has four 
entrances, and the interior is a perfect maze of passages ; but its chief 
peculiarity in the interior is the excavation seventy-seven feet deep by 
about twenty-four feet square, sunk immediately under the centre of this 
remarkable monument, the roof of this excavation being dome-shaped of 
rubble-work, originally supported by wooden rafters, which have long 
since decayed and fallen away, and the roof is held in place by the 
strength of the cement with which the rubble-work was made. The 
bottom of this shaft or excavation is paved with granite blocks, beneath 
which is a chamber ten feet long and five feet high, the entrance to which 
was covered up with an enormous block of granite weighing four tons. 
It is as difficult to describe the plan of the interior of this Pyramid as it 
is to find out what the monument was originally used for. Many of the 
chambers have been decorated with a series of bluish-green convex 
" tiles," on the backs of which are a number of hierogl3^phics. General 
Minutoli entered this Pyramid in the year 1821 and discovered numerous 
very interesting relics in the various passages aad chambers, among 
which was a gilded skull and two human feet that were ornamented in a 
most peculiar manner all of which were afterward lost at the mouth of 
the Elbe. 

In many of the chambers and passages were found fragments of 
broken alabaster and marble vases, stars and broken ornaments that no 



372 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

doubt at one time formed the decorations of the different chambers in this 
most remarkable " Step Pyramid of Sakkarah." It is rather difficult to 
make the ascent of this monument alone ; but with the help of the Arab 
guide I had no trouble, comparatively speaking, in reaching tbe top of 
the most extraordinary Pyramid. The view from the summit is not near 
so good as that from the larger one at Gizeh, not being near so high, con- 
sequently we could not expect so fine a view. 

In rambling around among these Pyramids and tombs we met a 
party of travellers who were making arrangements for a trip to the Penin- 
sula of Sinai; but had come out to this site of ancient Memphis for the 
express purpose of meeting some of my own party who had agreed to go 
with them, so instead of returning to Cairo they all rode over to our camp 
with us and we were very soon supplied with our evening meal, to which 
we all did ample justice. After the meal was over we lit our cigars and 
spent the evening in merriment and song, while the Arab servants and 
guides were making the necessary preparations for breaking camp. The 
next morning bright and early we packed our few personal traps, partook 
of a hasty meal, and rode off to Cairo, leaving the tents, baggage, etc., 
to be brought in by sumpter camels. 

We arrived at Shepheard's dusty and tired, where we soon refreshed 
ourselves with a good bath and cooling drink from the fountain of Zem 
Zem, and that night we spent at the hotel with our departing friends. 
The next morning we wished them " bon vo3'age,'' as they started off on 
their long journey, to follow in the footsteps of the Israelites, to cross the 
Red Sea and explore the Sinaitic Peninsula. I did not remain in Cairo, as 
I was very anxious to get away and investigate the Tombs, Temples, 
Monuments, etc., of Upper Egypt; therefore the rest of us arranged for 
our boat to meet us at some point on the river to be decided on later, and 
in order to complete my investigations of the principal P3'ramids of the 
Nile Valley I found that we would have to visit Rikka, to be able to ex- 
amine the oldest monuments in the world, known as The Pyramid and 
Mast abas of Medum. 

There are a great many authorities who believe the Step Pyramid of 
Sakkarah to be far older than any other fabric in the Nile Valley, basing 
their opinion or assertions upon the statement of Manetho, who attributes 
the Step Pyramid to Unenephus, who built the Pyramid at Cochome, as a 




CORNER OF THE GREAT PYRAMID, 

MAKING THE ASCENT. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 373 

monument to one of the Kings of tlie first Dynasty. Cochome was the 
Greek form of the hieroglyphic name Ka-kam " the Black Bull," which 
occurs on the " steles " and sarcophagi of the Apis tombs, as a place 
in the vicinity of the Necropolis. If this view be correct we have in. 
the Step Pyramid the most ancient structure in the world. But there: 
are numerous authorities who reject these statements, and assign its 
erection to one of the Kings of the fifth dynasty with very little evi- 
dence to prove their statements, consequently we are left to our own 
judgment in this matter. I shall describe the various monuments and 
leave it with you, my dear Brothers, as to which is the older. 

Between three and four miles South of Sakkarah we find a group 
of Pyramids at Dashoor, they are four in number, two of stone and two 
of brick. The most Northern of the stone Pyramids is nearl}^ as large 
as the Great Pyramid at Gizeh at the base, but is not nearly so high. 
It contains three chambers, lying one beyond the other, and they are 
constructed in a very peculiar manner, for the stones which form their 
sides overlap each other and draw in toward the roof, making it s 
pyramidical chamber, large at the bottom and very small at the top 
or ceiling. The other stone Pyramid is rather remarkable on account 
of the manner of its construction, it having been built at two different 
angles and is known as the " Blunted Pyramid." Its base is six hun- 
dred and nineteen feet long and its height three hundred and twenty- 
one feet. There was a very peculiar door used for closing the entrance 
to this Pyramid. It was hung on a horizontal stone hinge, and was dis- 
covered by W. Flinders Petrie during his researches among this group. 

Mr. M. de Morgan made some very valuable discoveries iu the 
years 1894-95 among the brick Pyramids of this group. He was very 
earnest and anxious in his explorations of these monuments, and gave the 
whole of his time and attention to the drifting into one of them, in 
order to find the regular passage or entrance into the interior. After 
he had drifted in to a considerable distance he discovered the real en- 
trance, originally formed by the men who constructed the Pyramid 
itself, and as soon as he found this passage-way he began exploring 
the interior. 

After traversing various passages, he had the good fortune to dis- 
cover the burial place of two royal ladies belonging to the twelfth 



■374 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

dynasty, whose tombs liad not been disturbed since tbey were deposited 
there by tender hands, iliirty ccnlitries before Chrisi, and just as they had 
been laid to rest in those remote and by-gone days of prehistoric civiliza- 
tion, so were they found, with not a single article displaced or disturbed. 
The jewels and golden ornaments glistened as bright and beautiful upon 
them as when first placed there by their loving friends who laid them to 
rest, away back in the remote ages of the past. The whole of these 
jewels and ornaments, as well as many other interesting relics are to be 
seen to-day in room seven at the Gizeh Museum. 

This same gentleman, in the year 1S96, made some other very 
important discoveries. Not very far from the house in which he lived 
during his researches, and quite close to the barren plateau, are to be 
seen two low mounds formed from the remains of what was originally 
two brick Pyramids. He thought that possibly he might make new dis- 
coveries by investigating the ru^ins of these ancient monuments, and after 
considerable time and labor he was rewarded by finding the passage and 
chambers, which he thoroughly explored in search of relics. In the one 
farthest to the south he found two small black granite Pyramids about 
three feet high, and in one of the chambers discovered a ver}' large sarco- 
phagus of red granite with nothing inscribed on it. It is very difiicult 
and dangerous to-day to search among the ruins of this Pyramid, as it is 
simply impossible to do so without the assistance of men and ropes to 
help you ; and, in fact, will hardly repay one for the time and trouble 
expended in exploring its dark passages and chambers. The Northern 
mound contains a sarcophagus in one of the chambers, which can very 
readily be seen, but this is about all that would interest any one in this 
ancient ruin. 

About nine miles south of this place are to be seen Tkc Pyramids of 
Lisht ; but they are in such a ruinous condition that it is not safe for any 
one to venture into them. Maspero attempted to thoroughly explore 
them, but he gave it up on account of finding so much water in ^ them. 
About the same time that M. de Morgan was investigating the group at 
Dashoor in 1S95, Mr. M. Guatier was exploring the ruins of these two 
Pyramids at Lisht, then considered unimportant, but after careful examin- 
ation he found within them statues of Usertesen I, very fine specimens of 
ancient Egyptian sculpture, and later on discovered a very large altar 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 375 

that stood in a funerary chapel that had been built on the east side of the 
southernmost of the two Pyramids. It is exquisitel}' carved and is a very 
fine specimen of ancient Egyptian Art, being dedicated to Usertesen I. 
This place was, no doubt, the necropolis of one of the ancient cities of 
the Golden i\.ge of Egypt, when Memphis was in the height of her glory, 
but to-day it is in utter ruin and naught remains to tell us of the van- 
ished glorj^ of this ancient city except the ruined monuments that I have 
just described and the few relics discovered within them. 

It is fully twelve miles to the south of Eisht before we come to those 
ancient monuments of Egypt, The Pyramids and Mastabas of Medtmi^ 
of which I have already spoken. Now, after carefully examining these 
wonderful fabrics, and devoting considerable study and much thought to 
the subject, I have come to the conclusion that they are the most ancient, 
in fact the oldest monuments in the world to-day, and for that reason, if 
no other, they are of especial interest to all men, and well deserving a 
visit from any one who goes to this most extraordinary part of the World, 
The Valley of the Nile. 

One lovely morning we took passage on board a steamer that was 
going up the river, but stopped at Rikka for the accommodation of any 
one desiring to visit the celebrated monuments of a prehistoric age at 
Medum. It was a beautiful morning as our steamer pushed off from the 
bank, to ascend this glorious old river. There was a strong " etesian " 
wind blowing and the loud shouts of the sailors, as they hoisted their 
sails on some of the Dahabiyes, came floating to us over the bosom of the 
waters, reminding me of by-gone days, and the first time I visited 
Egypt and took passage on one of the Nile boats to examine the various 
points of interest that lay along its banks. 

When I was a boy, it was the only way that one could travel on a 
trip to Upper Egypt. Ah! what enjoyable days they were to all of us; 
the boat was our home, our castle, for a few months at least, if no more. 
This floating home of ours had a peculiar charm and attraction that is 
difficult to explain. In our journeyings we could stop just when and 
where we wished. We could go off and hunt, or examine a tomb or 
temple at our leisure, and if the wind would not help us, we could always 
tie up to the bank and amuse ourselves in a dozen different ways. If I 
were going back to Egypt, to-day, to examine or explore the stupendous 



376 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

fabrics that adorn the banks of this grand old river Nile, I would take 
the Dahabiyeh in preference to any other mode of travel. Of course, one 
should not be pushed for time, but go with the understanding that you 
would have to depend principally upon the wind, with very little tow- 
path ; and all those who travel on a Dahabiyeh will most assuredly enjoy 
it above all other modes of travel used in Egypt. If they should make 
the ascent of the first cataract in one of these Dahabiyehs, the memory of 
it would remain with them so long as life would last. The ride up the 
Nile on the steamer is very monotonous, between Gizeh and Rikka, for 
the banks of the river are quite low, and all the villages are very much 
alike, with but little to be seen, excepting the various groups of Pyra- 
mids which rise here and there into our view as we steam along, causing 
one to ponder upon the prehistoric people who built them and the knowl- 
edge to which they had attained, in quarrying and moving tremendous 
blocks of stone, in order to build those tremendous fabrics that have been 
the wonder and admiration of every age in the history of the world. 

We landed at Rikka and secured donkeys to carry us out to this 
most remarkable Pyramid, standing seemingly upon a mound that was 
located fully an hour's ride from the river. It was a most delightful trip, 
and the great 'fabric that we are now approaching shines out resplendent 
in the glorious sunshine, in most exquisite coloring. We rode off down 
the track and turned into the square green fields of corn, beans, clover, 
etc., that ran up to the very foot of the necropolis of " Mi-Tum " Medum 
and the celebrated Pyramid itself, which is called by the fellaheen and 
Arabs " Harem-el- Kadab," or the False Pyramid. We now discovered 
that what we had taken to be a mound, upon which this famous Pyramid 
had been built, was simply the rubbish surrounding it at its base, formed 
no doubt from the outer casing which rose mound like all around the 
structure. 

Mr. Flinders Petrie spent a great deal of time and patience in his 
explorations of the various points of interest among the tombs and 
temples of Medum, and has given to the world a vast amount of informa- 
tion in relation to these ancient buildings of the Third and Fourth 
dynasties. When first the stone composing this marvellous Pyramid was 
brought from the quarries it was most assuredly pure white limestone ; 
but to-day it is of a beautiful orange hue, it having gradually changed, 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 377 

witli the rolliug centuries, from a pure white into a most magnificent 
yellow color, whose golden hues must be seen in order to be fully appre- 
ciated. This Pyramid rises in three stages above an apparent artificial 
mound, which is at least one hundred and twenty feet above the plain. 
The first stage above the mound is sixty-nine feet, the second twenty 
feet, and the third about twenty-three feet, the whole forming a square 
tower that rises in three stages, whose summit is fully two hundred and 
thirty feet above the level of the plain, having the appearance of some 
of the ancient mastabas of the old empire. The whole fabric seems to 
have lifted itself out of the brown mass of rubbish at its base into a most 
magnificent, glorious, shining golden tower that points upwards into the 
azure vault above. Once seen it will live in one's memory through all 
his life. The entrance to this Pyramid is situated on the north side, 
nearly fifty-four feet above the level of the desert sands, the passage 
descending at a certain angle for a distance of two hundred and thirty- 
four feet, where it falls upon a level passage-way of about forty feet in 
length, from the end of which a vertical shaft leads upwards into an 
empty chamber or tomb. 

Maspero entered this Pyramid on the thirteenth day of December, 
1882 ; Avhen he found the passages and chambers he at once realized that 
it had been broken into and its sarcophagus and the contents taken 
therefrom. Mariette Bey states that the name of the king by whose 
order this Pyramid was erected for the repose of his own mummy is 
positively unknown, but there is every reason to believe that it Avas 
Sneferou, the predecessor of Cheops, for his tomb is unknown. This 
Pyramid is a most magnificent specimen of ancient Egyptian architecture, 
with its closely fitting joints and polished blocks of Mokattum limestone 
showing conclusively the rare excellence to which the ancient Egyptians 
had attained. Sneferou was, according to Bruysch Bey, the last king 
of the third dynasty B. c. 3766. Mariette Bey claims that the third 
dynasty commenced b. c. 4449, and that Sneferou was the first king of 
the fourth dynasty who reigned about b. c. 4235. 

It was in the most northern mastaba of the necropolis of Medum that 
Mariette, in January, 1872, discovered two of the most marvellous portrait 
statues that has ever been foi:nd. They are almost life-size, and were 
carved out of limestone, being remarkable as the oldest known statues 



378 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

existing in the world to-da}-, and represent Ra-Hotep — son of Sneferou, 
" commander of the king's warriors, chief of the priests in the temple city 
of On, Heleopolis, the town of the Sun God Ra — and his princess wife, 
Nofrit, or Nefert, the beautiful — the king's granddaughter." Once seen 
these statues will never be forgotten, for the exquisite carvings are perfect 
and shows the wonderful skill and knowledge to which sculptors had 
attained in that early period, over six thousand years ago. The ej^es of 
these wonderful statues once seen will so impress themselves upon you 
that you will always remember them, for they are perfectly life-like. 
The eyes are made of rock crystal, resting upon a back-ground of silver, 
which reflects the light in such a way that it appears as if they were eyes 
of a living human being. 

In order that you may get the opinion of one of our greatest Egyp- 
tologists respecting these statues, I will quote you from Maspero's 
"Dawn of Civilization," page 363, wherein he states that these two 
statues were : " discovered in a tomb near Meydoum. According to the 
chronological table of Mariette, it is five thousand and eight hundred 
years old. Their rock crystal eyes are so bright that the Arabs 
emplo3^ed in the excavation, fled in terror when they came upon the long- 
hidden chamber. They said that two afreets were sitting there ready to 
spring out and devour all intruders. These statues were discovered in a 
half ruined mastaba and have fortunately reached us without having 
suffered the least damage, almost without losing anA' of their original 
freshness. They are to be seen in the Gizeh Museum, just as they were 
when they were discovered by Mariette in the condition in which they 
left the hands of the workmen. 

" Rahotpu [Ra-Hotep) was the son of a king possibly Snofrui 
{Sneferoii) ; but despite his high origin I find something humble and 
retiring in his physiognomy. Nofrit {Nefert), on the contrar}-, has an 
imposing appearance, an indescribable air of resolution and command 
invests her whole person, and the sculptor has cleverly given an expres- 
sion to it. She is represented with a robe with a pointed opening in the 
front ; the shoulders, bosom, waist and hips are shown under the material 
of the dress with a purity and delicate grace which one does not always 
find in modern works of art. The wig secured on the forehead b}^ a 
richly embroidered band, frames with its somewhat heavy masses the 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 379 

firm and rather plump face ; the eyes are living, the nostrils breathe, the 
mouth smiles, and is about to speak. The Art of Egypt has at times 
been as fully inspired, it has never been more so than on the day in 
which it produced the statue Nofrit'' (Nefert). Ra-Hotep sits with his 
right hand extended across his breast and his left upon his knee. He 
wears a simple jewel upon his neck and his body nude excepting for the 
waist-cloth that enwraps his loins. It is a most exquisite specimen of 
ancient Egyptian sculpture. There has never been a time in the history 
of Egypt when they could produce statuary more speaking and life- 
like than these two statues of Ra-Hotep and his charming wife, the 
Lady Nefert. 

Medum has most assuredly furnished a great number of works of 
Art, which certainly goes to prove that sculpturing, frescoing, painting, 
etc., was most thoroughly comprehended by the artists who wrought them, 
when the Craftsman who worked in the Mokattum hills were quarrying 
the stones for the erection of the Pyramids in the extraordinary city of 
Memphis. The tomb in which Mr. Flinders Petrie made his headquarters 
during his explorations of this ancient necropolis, the tomb of Nefermaat, 
was a veritable treasure house of beautiful carvings, paintings, etc., illus- 
trating the scenes of hawking, hunting, fishing and agricultural pursuits, 
very finely executed. It was in this tomb, or rather Lady Atot's chamber, 
that Mariette found the fresco of geese which now adorns the Gizeh 
Museum, and many other beautiful works of Art that were executed by 
these people long before the Sphinx looked to the East in the plains of 
Gizeh, across the desert sands of Arabia. 

Students of hieroglyphics and ancient Art will find here in Medum 
a rich field to repay them for their time and trouble. The inscriptions 
found here upon these monuments present some of the oldest forms of 
writing, very clear, simple and beautiful in their grammatical construc- 
tion as well as in clearly defined letters and carvings. Mariette Bey 
considered the tomb of Nefermaat to be the most carefully constructed 
and the best built tomb throughout the whole of the " Land of Egypt." 
The paintings are all well preserved, and many of them to-day are most 
exquisite specimens of Egyptian skill, although executed three thousand 
seven hundred and fifty years before Christ. The artists who executed 
the work show rare ability, as they painted and carved true to nature, for 



380 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

nothing is misrepresented, but each and all, in their proper colors and 
exact proportions. The Craftsmen who built the temple, or tomb, were 
thoroughly competent and well qualified to handle the enormous blocks of 
stone found here, and some of them in the ceiling measure twenty feet in 
length and fully three feet thick, weighing not less than forty tons each. 
This fact alone demonstrates to us, of the present day, the wondrous 
knowledge in Architecture possessed by the artisans who wrought long 
centuries before authenticated history. No one visiting the valley of the 
Nile should fail to see the celebrated tombs and temples of Medum and 
examine carefully the interior and exterior parts of these ver}' remark- 
able relics of the " Golden x\ge of Egypt." 

One of the most delightful places in which to spend a winter in 
Bgypt is the Fayum. But few tourists go into this most interesting and 
fertile oasis that lies just one day's journey from the city of Cairo by rail 
or about three days on horseback ; but all who take the time to go always 
come away charmed and delighted with their ramblings from one place to 
another, where the continual clamoring for "Baksheesh, O Hawadji'' is 
seldom or never heard. For my part I much prefer the horseback ride to 
the cars, for the simple reason that one who goes on horseback will be 
enabled to take in the whole of the various groups of tombs, temples and 
Pyramids, from the plains of Gizeh to Medum, and either he or they will 
most assuredly enjoy the trip far better than they could in the hot dusty 
cars. If you ride on horseback you can rest when you wish, stop where 
you like, and examine the various points of interest at your leisure ; while 
on the cars you would only be enabled to catch glimpses of tombs and 
temples that would well repay you to visit. Again, going on horseback 
you would be in a far better position to study the manners and customs of 
the fellaheen, who till the soil to-day in the same manner that their 
great ancestors did ere Joseph was sold into the " Land of bondage." 

Beside all this you will be enabled to see the peculiar encampments 
of the Bedouin Arabs, who locate here in many of the fields rented from 
the fellaheen, and feed their camels and horses on the rich lucerne that 
grows here in such abundance. You will most certainly pass on your way 
a great many hunters who go out from Cairo to shoot over the cultivated 
fields that border the desert sands lying along your path, and considered 
to be the best place for quail shooting throughout the whole of Egypt. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 381 

But I do not wish to dwell too long upon the charms of horseback riding 
from the city of Cairo to the Fayum, for if I did this chapter would 
lengthen out to such an extent that I would be unable to describe this 
very interesting part of Egypt where Joseph lived and gave his name to 
one of the oldest canals in the " Land of Egypt." 

The province or district in Egypt called the Fayum is a natural 
peculiar basin-shaped depression in the Libyan Desert, and is one of the 
most fertile provinces in the valley of the Nile. It is surrounded by 
desert sands, with the exception of the fringe of vegetation that adorns 
Bahr-Yusuf, which connects it with the river Nile and is about two 
hundred and seven miles in length. It flows into this fertile valley 
through a natural opening, caused by a peculiar trend of the Libyan 
chain of moimtains, which a little north of Benisuef begin to circle off to 
the northwest, returning again toward the east and the river Nile. It 
has in its peculiar convolutions inclosed a ver^^ large tract of land, that 
was called by the ancient Eg37ptians Arsinoe and now known as the 
Fayum, coming from the Egyptian word '• Phiom," signifying the sea, 
marsh or lake country, described in the hieroglj'phic inscriptions of the 
fourth d3'nasty as " Ta-slic,^^ the land of the lake. 

The opening of this valley is about four miles wide, through which 
the canal passes, and where it is divided into numerous branches that 
ramify from the main stem to the various parts of the valle}^, so as to 
irrigate and reclaim a vast amount of the desert sands (See Chapter 
VI of this work). The Fayum is noted for its fertility, as it pro- 
duces an abundance from all seeds sown or planted in its remarkably 
rich soil. Here in this wonderful valley are to be seen large fields of 
corn, cotton, sugar cane, beans, clover, etc., besides all kinds of vege- 
tables. It produces ver}' fine grapes, from which they manufacture an 
excellent wine. This place is noted for its olives and it abounds in date 
palm groves, roses growing in rich profusion, while apricots, figs and 
other kinds of fruit are quite prolific. Considerable cattle is raised here, 
and since sugar-cane has been planted and found to do so well, a large 
number of sugar factories are to be found here. 

This valley was the site of that ancient reservoir " Lake Moeris," 
the remains of which are to be plainly seen and traced to-day. It was 
originally used for the purpose of regulating the annual flow of the inuu- 



382 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

dations of the river Nile, for irrigating the various parts of the " Land of 
Bgypt." Strabo tells us that " Lake Moeris, owing to its size and depth, 
is capable of receiving the superabundance of water during the inunda- 
tion, without overflowing the habitations and crops ; but later, when the 
water subsides and after the lake has given up its excess through one of 
its two mouths, both it and the canal retain water enough for purposes of 
irrigation. This is accomplished by natural means ; but at both ends of 
the canal there are also lock-gates, b}^ means of which the engineer can 
regulate the influx and efflux of the water." 

The cultivated part of this fertile valley is about twenty-five miles 
long by about thirty miles wide, and the district contains a population of 
two hundred thousand inhabitants, while the annual revenue is very 
nearl}^ a million dollars. Its principal commerce is cotton, corn, cattle, 
mostly sheep, which are considered to be the best breed in the valley of 
the Nile. This province contains a large number of towns and villages, 
and is a perfect paradise for hunters, especially upon and around the 
borders of Berket el-Ourun (the lake of the Horn). 

The water of this lake is very salty and brackish in midsummer, 
just before the annual inundations of the Nile. It lies considerably 
below the bed of the river, and is no doubt fed by the filtrations from the 
canals and the Nile. The view of the lake from the cultivated fields and 
uplands of the Fayum is just simply grand, as it lies nestling up against 
the fertile fields and vegetation that goes sloping down to the edge of the 
rippling waters, shining like a sea of burnished silver, glittering in the 
glorious sunlight from an unclouded sk}', fairly dazzles one's vision. 
The various shades of green from the fertile fields, tamarisk bushes and 
dense palm groves lend a charm and fascination to the scene that is 
indescribably grand and beautiful. The lake is nearly thirty-five miles 
long and about seven miles wide, and its depth varies according to the 
season of the year. It lies at the foot of a richly cultivated upland on 
one side and bordered by the desert sands on the other, which stretches 
off into a series of rolling hills that connect with the rocky mountain 
chain which bounds our horizon in that direction. The lake abounds 
with fish, and in the winter there is not in the whole of Egypt a better 
place for hunting, tor here are to be found quail in immense quantities 
and all kinds of aquatic birds fairl}^ swarm from one end of the lake to 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 383 

the other, while among the tamarisk bushes and palm groves are to be 
found plenty of wolves and wild boar. 

There are a few very interesting ruins at various points around this 
lake, and the principal ones are to be found about fifteen miles from the 
town of Nesla, and which is called Qttasr Ouncn^ the remains of an 
ancient Egyptian temple, that is well Avorth visiting. It contains a great 
many chambers, stairways and passage-ways, giving unmistakable 
evidences of the good workmanship of the craftsmen who erected it. 
There are quite a number of ruins scattered around in this vicinity, and 
among them a number of arches of both stone and brick and partially 
demolished walls, around which can be found ancient copper coins, 
fragments of glass, etc., if yon will take time to grub around in the sand 
among the ruins. On the borders of this lake, not far from Senhur, are 
to be found some old ruins called El-Hamman ; in fact, we can find the 
remains of tombs, temples, reservoirs, etc., all around this lake, that will 
prove of deep interest to all those who visit them. Medinet el-Fayura, 
'' The town of the Lake," is the capital of the Fayura, and has a popula- 
tion of about forty thousand inhabitants. It is a typical Egyptian town, 
with its long covered bazar and motley assemblage of people, who congre- 
gate there, and its baths, with Greek coffee houses, etc., etc., all going to 
make up a modern twentieth century town in the valley of the Nile. We 
notice that these people hold their regular markets on Sunday. 

This town is located on one of the main branches of the Bahr Yusuf, 
where we could see the women continually going and coming at certain 
times to fill their heavy clay " goolahs " with water, to be used for their 
household ; they carry these heavy " goolahs " upon their heads, with a 
peculiar grace that is truly remarkable. The canal runs through the 
town and is distributed to the various parts throughout this fertile valle}^ 
by devices, such as water-wheels, flumes, etc. The canal in many places 
is more like a river, as it goes winding along by the houses and walls of 
the town, giving a charming effect to its surroundings, and reflecting the 
houses, trees and walls of the town in its flowing waters. There we can 
see the bearded wheat of ancient Egypt growing luxuriantly, very long 
in the ear, but short in the straw. 

Every person who goes into the Fayum should not fail, upon any 
consideration, to get an introduction to the Mtidir of the district, as it 



384 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

would be of very great assistance to either him or them iu all their busi- 
ness transactions ; but more especially if there is any trouble with the 
fellaheen, for horse, camel or donkey hire. There are no especial build- 
ings in this modern town, that I cared for, and the only one of real 
interest that I noticed was the mosque of Ouait Bey, which is in a very 
ruinous condition. It is a kind of a mosaic structure that contains 
various columns originally belonging to different buildings in the old city 
of Arsinoe, formerly Crocodopolis, the ancient Egyptian city of S/ia/, or 
Pa-Sebek (" the abode of Sebek "), who is represented with the head of a 
crocodile, and there in lake Moeris they used to keep this sacred animal, 
and worshipped it throughout the whole of the Arsinoite Nome in the 
ancient days of Egyptian history. In fact one of their triads that was 
worshipped here was Sebek, Hathor, and Horns. 

Leo Africanus says, " The ancient city {Pa-Sebek) was built by one 
of the Pharaohs, on an elevated spot near a small canal from the Nile, at 
the time of the exodus of the Jews, after he had afflicted them with the 
drudgery of hauling stones and other laborious employments." 

There are extensive ruins on the site of this ancient city, and many 
very important antiquities have been found here, also a large quantity of 
papyri, mostly Greek, and some of them written in hieroglyphics and 
hieratic characters dating back to the time of Rameses III. 

It was here, within the Fayum, that the celebrated Labyrinth was 
built by Amen-em-hat III. It was a most extraordinar}^ building and is 
said to contain three thousand chambers, half of which were subter- 
ranean and the other half lying above ground, and the whole of each 
series connected together by the most intricate passages and irregular 
corridors. It was considered very dangerous for any one to venture into 
the interior, without a guide, for fear of getting lost among the labyrinth 
of passages that ramified throughout the whole of this remarkable edifice. 

Herodotus says that " the Temples of Ephesus and Samos may 
justly claim admiration and the Pyramids may be individually compared 
to many of the magnificent structures of Greece, but even these are 
inferior to the Labyrinth. It is composed of twelve courts all of which 
are covered, their entrances stand opposite to each other, six to the north 
and six to the south, one wall enclosing the whole. Of the apartments 
above the ground I can speak," continues Herodotus, " from my own 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 385 

personal knowledge and observation ; of those below, from information 
I received. The Egyptians who bad charge of the latter would not 
suffer me to see them ; and their reason was, that in them were preserved 
the sacred crocodiles and the bodies of the Kings who constructed the 
Labyrinth. Of these, therefore, I do not presume to speak ; but the 
upper apartments I myself visited, and I pronounce them amongst the 
grandest efforts of human industry and art. The almost infinite niimber 
of winding passages through the different courts excited my highest 
admiration ; from spacious halls I passed through smaller chambers, and 
from them again to large and magnificent saloons, almost without end. 
The walls and ceiling are marble, the latter embellished with the most 
exquisite sculpture ; around each court pillars of the richest and most 
polished marble are arranged, and at the termination of the Labyrinth 
stands a pyramid one hundred and sixt}' cubits high, approached by a 
subterranean passage, and with its exterior enriched by figures of 
animals." 

The object of building this remarkable structure cannot be fully 
conjectured, nor will it ever be properly known. Neither should we have 
been enabled to have known anything, for certain about it, if Herodotus 
had not given us the above description and told of its exact location — at 
the entrance of the canal into Lake Moeris ; and when Mr. Flinders 
Petrie, in 18S7-8, started a systematic exploration at the supposed site 
of the Labyrinth and the Pyramid of Hawara he most assuredly settled 
many mooted questions. He not only found the site of the Labyrinth, 
but he found the remains of two statues whereon was inscribed the name 
of Amen-em-hat III, the creator of Lake Moeris and the Fayum, and 
also the pedestals upon which they stood, thus proving beyond the 
shadow of a doubt the assertions of Herodotus, who wrote of having 
seen two statues that stood upon the tops of two Pyramids that were 
erected in the middle of Lake Moeris. These two statues of Amen-em-hat 
III, were no doubt erected in commemoration of the work that he had 
done in reducing the size of the lake, deepening its waters, and in this 
way reclaiming a vast area of swampy marsh land that had long been 
submerged by the flooding waters of the river Nile. 

Mr. Petrie, in the year 1889, opened the Pyramid of Hawara, wherein 

he expected to find at least the mummy of the original Pharaoh, who 
25 



386 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

founded the Labyrinth and made the Fayum a paradise ; but he was very 
much disappointed upon entering the Pyramid and discovering the cham- 
ber, to find the sarcophagus of both Amen-em-hat and his daughter, 
Ptah-nef-eru, empty, with the lids of each lying askew on top of them. 

One thing very remarkable about this chamber, was that it was 
carved from a single stone. The dimensions of this chamber are twenty- 
two feet, three and one-half inches long by seven feet ten inches wide, by 
six feet two inches high. The stone is of very hard quartzite sandstone, 
with walls very nearly three feet thick and weighing about one hundred 
and eighty tons. 

Under the head of a mummy excavated at Hawara Mr. Petrie also 
found a large roll of papyrus, which contains almost the whole of the 
second book of " Homer's Iliad." This was not the property of some old, 
dried-up philologist, for it laid under the skull of a 3^oung lady, whose 
features are still attractive and very intellectual, finely chiselled and 
refined looking. Both the skull and the papyrus, together with the jet 
black tresses of this nameless Hypatia, are now in the Bodleian Library 
at Oxford. It is one of the three oldest manuscripts of " Homer's Iliad" 
known to exist. There are two others that also came from Egj'pt. 
They are all' useful in correcting the received text. There is another 
Pyramid about five or six miles to the east of the Labyrinth which is 
called Illahun, or El-Lahun. Mr. Flinders Petrie penetrated this Pyra- 
mid and found many interesting things, but to-day it is hardly worth 
spending the time to visit it. 



^xtn 35ilors!)ip— lotiiac— iHasonic Allegories. 



387 



By lustrous heralds led on high 

"Cbc omniscient Sun ascends the sky, 

Ris glory drawing every eye. 

HU-seeing Sun, the stars so bright 

mhicb gleamed throughout the sombre night, 

Now scared, like thieves, slink fast away, 

Quenched by the splendor of thy ray. 

"Chy beams to men thy presence show; 
Like bla::ing fires they seem to glow. 
Conspicuous, rapid, source of light, 
"Chou makest all the welkin bright. 
In sight of gods and mortal eyes, 
In sight of heaven thou scal'st the skies. 

Bright god, thou scann'st with searching ken 

I^hc doings all of busy men. 

Chou stridcst o'er the sky, thv rays 

Create and measure out our days; 

"Chine eye all living things surveys. 

Seven lucid marcs thy chariot bear, 
Self-yoked, athwart the fields of air. 
Bright Surya, god with flaming hair. 
Chat glow above the darkness, we 
Beholding, upward soar to thee, 
for there among the gods thy light 
Supreme is seen, divinely bright. 

— 1 lamlatt'd Jiom the Sanskrit by Dr. J. 3/iiii: 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 389 



CHAPTER XVII. 

SUN WORSHIP— ZODIAC— MASONIC ALLEGORIES. 

(sTV CAREFUL examination of the religious beliefs of the people of 
^^ the ancient world, and a study of their mode or manner of 
worship, will show that in a great many countries, and 
especially in the " Far East," God has been worshipped under the symbol 
of the Sun. For thousands of years men have worshipped this great 
luminary, the source of all light, whose very essence is Generation and 
Life ; the container of both, for without the great and glorious Sun-God 
all the earth would be enwrapped in darkness and death. Its Light is 
emblematic of eternal verities and its heat of benevolence and love, thus 
constituting a fitting symbol of that great and incomprehensible Principle 
which holds the Kosmos in the hollow of His hand. They no doubt 
began to worship the vSun on account of observing the regularity of its 
motions, which knew no change 

They observed that nations and cities would pass away and new ones 
arise upon the site of the old empires ; that tombs, temples and enduring 
monuments would decay and crumble into dust, be scattered to the four 
cardinal points of the universe, and still the regularity of the Sun's 
motions underwent no change. He visited the old and new alike, and his 
light shone with unchanging rays upon all. To them his apparent 
journeyings around the earth was emblematic of Life, Death and the 
Re-incarnation of the Spirit or immortality of the Soul, and instilled into 
the very heart and mind of man, not only thoughts on the Immortality of 
the Soul, but of that Immutability symbolizing the Great Eternal 
Unknown God, to whom they offered up their most profound love and 
adoration. 

Long centuries before the Delta of the Nile was formed or brought 
from the mountains of Abyssinia, within the throbbing bosom of old God 
Nilus it performed its diurnal motions with the same unchanging regu- 



390 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

larity and exactitude that it does to-day. It was that steadfast, immutable 
motion, whose course throughovit the stellar world above, knowing no 
change, that caused men iu every age and every epoch of the world's 
history to ascribe God-like attributes to this glorious Orb, which is the 
same to-day as when Abraham saw it glitter in the plains of Shinar, as it 
is now and ever will be, for ever and ever, the most splendid and magnifi- 
cent object in all nature. 

I do not wish to dwell upon the Si:n-worshippers of the world ; but 
will confine myself altogether to those of Egypt, and endeavor to show 
their proficiency in Astronomy and its relation to ancient Masonry. I 
have referred to the ancient legend of the slaying of Osiris by Typhon^ in 
the third chapter of this work, which will no doubt prove interesting to 
you, my dear Brothers, for whom this book was written. 

The worship of the Sun in Egypt was the same as in other countries^ 
the basis of all religion. To them the forces emanating from this great 
and glorious luminary were as much a problem as they are to us, for 
Light, Heat and Electricity are as yet unsolved problems. We know 
that each one of them is manifested throughout the Kosmos ; but those 
manifestations are as yet mysteries to us, and so far we do not nor cannot 
understand them, only in their effects. 

The great god of the ancient Egyptians was Amun, represented by a 
man standing upright, wearing upon his head a flat cap, with two tall 
straight feathers, and holding in his left hand the sceptre, while in the 
right he holds the sign of Life. We sometimes find him seated as a 
miummy, with the same red cap and feathers, holding in his hands the 
sceptre, scourge and crook, in which position he is supposed to represent 
Amun-Osiris. He may be found identified with many other gods. 

Herodotus tell us in Book II, 42, that " the Thebans and those who, 
like them, abstain from eating sheep, say they do it for this reason, that 
Jupiter (Amun) when Hercules desired to see him, at first refused, but on 
his persisting, cut off the head of a ram which he flayed and held it before 
him, clothing himself in the skin and showed himself to him in this form. 
And for this reason the Egyptians represent Jupiter with the head of a 
ram. And once a year, on the festival of Jupiter, they kill and flay a ram 
and clothe the statue of Jupiter in the manner described, and then bring 
near to it another statue of Hercules." 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 391 

Jablonsk}' thought that Amun represented the Sun in Aries, and 
that the position of this Sun God Ra^ at the four cardinal points of the 
universe at the four great seasons of the year, was the symbol of the Egyp- 
tian Gods Amun, Horns, Serapis and Harpocrates. Although there is no 
positive evidence of this being true, there being no actual confirmation of 
the above opinion, 3'et, the name Ra — Sun — is often found joined together 
as Amun Ra, which seems to indicate their relationship, or an original 
connection -with the Solar god. We find upon many of the monuments 
throughout Egypt the name of Amun Ra that has been substituted for 
some other, and it has been so carefully and cleverly done that it is very 
difficult to ascertain what the original name could have been. According 
to Major Felix the obliterated characters "were a vulture flying, its body 
formed b}' an eye, holding in its claws a signet (Birch-Galler\' of Antiq., 
page 2, note 12). The fl3'ing vulture was the emblem of the goddess of 
Elithyia, who corresponded with the Lucina of the Latins. Bunsen sup- 
poses that the ithypophallic Khem was the god for whom Amun was 
substituted." There are various authorities who believe that it was on 
account of some change in the religious S3'stem of these people. 

According to ancient Egj^ptian history we find that Amen-hetep IV 
(who reigned b. c. 1400) apostatized from the faith of his Fathers, and 
there is certain evidence to prove that his mother was the cause of this 
backsliding, which occasioned him to change his faith and name. He 
induced a great many prominent men to follow his example, but could not 
influence the priests of Egypt, as they were bitterly opposed to his form 
of worship. He had to leave Thebes on account of opposition by the 
people, urged on no doubt b}- the priests, Avhen thej' found that he had 
forsaken the True God for the heretical doctrines of his mother. Pos- 
sibly it may have been the name of this king that was erased from the 
tombs and temples. Let me quote you from Murray, ,page 60, in relation 
to this matter. " The heretic King Amen-hetep IV, who, under the influ- 
ence of his mother Teie endeavored to substitute a sort of Asiatic mono- 
theism, under the form of the worship of the solar disk, for the official 
religion of Egypt. 

" The cult and very name of Amen were proscribed, the name being 
erased from the monuments wherever it occurred, and the King changed 
his own name from Amen-hetep to Khu-n-Aten, ' the glory of the solar 



392 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

disk.' In the struggle which ensued between the Pharaoh and the pow- 
erful hierarchy of Thebes, Khu-n-Aten found himself obliged to leave 
the capital of his father and build a new one further north, called Khu-t- 
Aten, the site of which is now occupied by the village of Tel-el-Amarna 
and Haggi Qandil. Here he surrounded himself with the adherents of 
the new creed, most of whom seemed to have been Canaanites or other 
natives of Asia, and erected in it a temple to the solar disk, as well as a palace 
for himself, adorned with painting, sculpture, gold, bronze and inlaid 
work in precious stones. Along with the religious reforms had gone a 
reform in Art ; the old hieratic canon of Egyptian art was abandoned and 
a striving for realism took its place. Adjoining the palace was ' the house 
of rolls ' or record office, where the cuneiform tablets were discovered 
which have thrown so much light on the history of Egypt and Canaan in 
the century before the Exodus. 

" The death of the King was followed by civil and religious war and 
the loss of the empire of Asia. The city of Khu-n-Aten was destroyed, 
not to be inhabited again, the Asiatic officials were driven from the country 
and the worship of Amen was restored." "The ancient Egj^ptians were the 
preservers if not the founders of Astronomy, and they claim to have been 
the teachers of the Chaldeans, whom they said were of their own stock 
and colony from Egypt " (see Herodotus, 2-82). The ancient Egyptians 
were most certainly very close observers of the aspects of the heavenly 
bodies and gave this science their most profound attention, for if we care- 
fully examine the meaning of the different signs of the Zodiac, as well as 
the symbol, we shall find that the various constellations are all named 
after some event or occurrence which happened in the ancient days of 
Pharaonic history in the " Land of Egypt." Again, the very fact of the 
Pyramids, in the plains of Gizeh, standing geometrically correct in rela- 
tion to their sides facing the four cardinal points of the universe, goes to 
prove their ability to establish an accurate meridian line. 

There is no question but they divided the Solar year into ^ twelve 
months and these into three hundred and sixty days which they after- 
wards added to the five intercalary days, thus making the year very nearly 
correct. But the name Month in their hieroglyphic inscriptions is repre- 
sented by the crescent moon, consequently we judge from this that their 
months must originally have been Lunar, although they may have had 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 393 

both Lunar and Solar. Of this we are not positively certain and we do 
not know exactly when the Solar month was introduced. These months 
each had a name, which names have been preserved to us by many writers 
and they correspond to those of the "Julian Year " as follows : i. Thoth 
— August; 2. Phaophi — September; 3. Athyr — October; 4. Choiak — 
November; 5. Tybi — December; 6. Mechir — January; 7. Phamenoth — 
February ; 8. Pharmuthi — March ; 9. Paeon — April ; 10. Payni — May ; 
II. Epiphi — June; 12. Mesori — July. 

Kenrick states in his " Ancient Egypt,'' Vol. I, page 277, that "When 
the Egyptians established the division of their years into twelve months 
of thirty days each, they may have reckoned the year at three hundred 
and sixty days ; but at a very early period they had learned to intercalate 
five additional days. When this great correction of their calendar took 
place is uncertain. Syncellus, in the Laterculus, attributes it to Asseth, 
one of the Shepherd Kings ; but Lepsius says that he has found traces of 
the five intercalary days, or Epagomenoe^ as the Greeks called them, in a 
grotto at Benihassan of the twelfth dynasty, that is before the invasion of 
the Shepherds. Their introduction into the year was expressed by an 
ingenious myth. Thoth (Hermes) the god of astronomy and calculation, 
played dice with the Moon and wins from her a seventieth (a round num- 
ber for seventy-seconds) part of each of the three hundred and sixty days 
of which the year consisted, out of which fractional parts (^ =^ 5) five 
entire days are composed. These days are consecrated to five gods whose 
worship thus seems to be indicated as of later origin ; the first to Osiris, 
the second to Aureris, the third to Typhon, the fourth to Isis and the fifth 
to Nephthys. In the astronomical monument at the Rameseum, a vacant 
space is left between Mesori the last, and Thoth the first, of the Egyptian 
months, apparently to represent the intercalated days. 

" But the intercalation of five days were not sufficient to bring the 
Egyptian calendar into harmony with the heavens. The true length of 
the Solar year exceeds three hundred and sixty-five days by nearly six 
hours. It is evident, therefore, that there would be an error in defect of 
a quarter of a day in every year, of a day in every four years, a month 
in every one hundred and twenty years, and a year of three hundred and 
sixty-five days, in fourteen hundred and sixty years. Without some 
further correction the Egyptian year would be an annus vagus ; its true 



394 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

commencement and all the festivals, tlie time of which was reckoned 
from it, travelling in succession through all the days and months, just as 
our own were doing ; but at a less rapid rate, and in a contrary direction, 
before the alteration of the Style. Herodotus appears not to have been 
aware that any correction had been applied to the calendar, or indeed 
required, since he praises the intercalation of five days, as bringing back 
the circle of the seasons to the same point. Diodorus, however, repre- 
sents the priests of Thebes and Strabo, those of Heliopolis, as knowing 
the true length of the solar year and intercalating five days and a 
quarter. They furnish no evidence, however, of the antiquity of the 
practice, nor its adoption in civil life. Indeed Geminus of Rhodes who 
lived in the time of Sylla, expressly says that the priests did not inter- 
calate the quarter day in order that the festivals might travel through the 
whole year, and ' the summer festival become a winter festival, and an 
autumn festival a spring festival.' Such a change implies that the origi- 
nal import of the festivals, some of which were closely connected with the 
season of the year, was no longer obvious. It is even said that the 
priests imposed on the sovereign at his inauguration an oath that he 
would keep up the old reckoning and not allow the quarter day to 
be intercalated. This again points to the time when the priests 
had become jealous of the civil power, and wished to perpetuate the 
confusion of the calendar, as the patricians did at Rome for their own 
purposes." 

Now, I firmly believe that the ancient Egyptian Priesthood was 
thoroughly versed in all the Sciences ; but more especially so in that of 
Astronomy, and carefully guarded the secrets of this Science from the 
people. By this means their despotic power was perpetuated and by 
keeping them in utter ignorance they could inspire a belief in their 
supernatural power and wisdom. Their predictions of eclipses of the sun 
and moon were watched by the masses with awe and superstitious dread, 
and each time the predictions were fulfilled these priests were credited with 
power to foretell other future events, such as years of famine or plenty, 
pestilence, earthquakes, inundations or changes in the various dynasties, 
along with othef things of an astonishing nature. They were, in con- 
sequence, looked upon as prophets among the vulgar and lower classes, 
and we can readily see how carefully they would guard their secrets from 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 395 

the profane, that, by their superior knowledge, they might rule them 
with a rod of iron. 

I previously stated that the ancient Egyptians worshipped the Sun, 
Moon, Stars and the river Nile, as gods, ascribing to them God-like attri- 
butes, being symbols to them of the Supreme x^rchitect of the Universe, 
and to deny the divinity of either, or even permit any one else to do so, 
was considered the most horrible crime of which a man could be guilty. 
Thus through their superior knowledge and wisdom the rule of the 
Priesthood was supreme over those who had not seen the Light of Initia- 
tion and who could not understand the profound Truths veiled in 
Allegory and illustrated by symbols. For this reason an oath was 
imposed upon the King whereby he was not to divulge the secrets of the 
veiled Mysteries. 

If we carefull}^ examine the very name Freemason, the Dimensions 
of our Lodges, its coverings, its Lights, the positions of its Officers, etc., 
etc., we shall find that the astronomical allegories of the ancient Egyp- 
tians have been intimately blended with the Legend of Osiris and that 
these astronomical allegories and symbols, are the safe and sacred reposi- 
tories of a profound Theosophical, Metaphysical and Philosophical Phil- 
osoph^^ An earnest search must be instituted that one may come to an 
understanding of the Sublimity and grandeur of the teachings of the 
Ancient Wisdom, embodied in the Secret Doctrine of the Princes and 
Adepts of our glorious Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite. These have 
ever striven to make their fellow-man and Brother wiser and better than 
themselves, to assist him in following the dictates of his own conscience and 
the judgment of his Higher self, inciting him to be manly, true, self-reliant 
and independent. They have alwaj^s been helpful in resisting spiritual 
Tyranny over their souls and consciences, by those striving to gain 
power by unworth}' means, and have ever been faithful unto death to 
their Brother b}' the wayside. Let me quote you from that very valuable 
work " Stellar Theology and Masonic Astronomy," by Robert Hewitt 
Brown, 32°, page 35. 

" The Sun rises in the east to open and govern the day, and sets 
in the west to close the labors of the same ; while the Sun in the south 
admonishes the weary workman of his mid-day meal and calls him from 
labor to refreshment. Dr. Oliver informs us, in his dictionary, that the 



396 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

pedestal, with the volume of the sacred laws, is placed in the eastern part 
of the Lodge to signify that as the Sun rises in the east to open and 
enliven the day, so is the Worshipful Master placed in the east, to open 
the Lodge and instruct the brethren in Masonry." 

Gadicke, another Masonic writer, says : " The Sun rises in the east^ 
and the east is the place for the II ^orshipful Master^ who is placed in the 
east to open the Lodge, and impart light, knowledge and instruction to 
all under his direction. When it arrives at its greatest altitude in the 
south, where its beams are most piercing and the cool shade most 
refreshing, it is then also well represented by th.e Junior Warden, who is 
placed in the south to observe its approach to meridian, and at the hour 
of noon to call the brethren from labor to refreshment. Still pursuing 
its course to the west, the Sun closes the da}' and lulls all nature to 
repose; it is then fitly represented by the Senior Harden, who is placed 
in the west to close the Lodge by the command of the Worshipful 
Master, after having rendered to every one the just reward of his labor." 
(I have quoted these authorities for the express purpose of showing 
that I do not stand alone in my assertions, see Chapter VIII, of this 
work.) 

On page 34, " Stellar Theology," it is asked, " How ought every 
Lodge to be situated ? " The answer is " Due east and west." Because, 
in the language of Dr. Hemming, a distinguished brother and Masonic 
writer, " the Sun, the glory of the Lord, rises in the east and sets in the 
west." It is again asked, " What are the dimensions and covering of 
a Lodge ? " and answer is, " Its dimensions are without limit, and its 
covering no less than the clouded canopy or starry-decked heavens." 
Then the question is asked, " How many lights has a Lodge ? " which is 
answered by Dr. Oliver, "a Lodge has three lights — one in the east, 
another in the west, and another in the south." 

It is thus apparent that not only the position, form, dimensions, 
lights and furniture of the Lodge, but also its principal officers, their 
respective stations, and duties there, all have reference to the Sun. 

It is my sincere conviction that all the incidents and allegories per- 
taining to Blue Masonry, or the Symbolic degrees, are true relics of 
Ancient Egyptian Astronom}'-, and are permeated with a far more pro- 
found meaning than is generally understood by a great majority of the 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 39T 

craft to-day. Let me quote you once more from " Stellar Theology," 
page 109 : 

'' If we view Masonry from a rational standpoint, and contemplate 
its mystic legends and allegories in their substance, without regard to 
the modern language, in which they are now clothed ; if we investigate 
the meaning of its ceremonies, without regard to the specific words 
used in conducting them ; if we study the signs, symbols and emblems, 
disregarding the erroneous modern applications given to many of them — 
the great antiquity of Masonry is apparent. It is now admitted on all 
sides that all the ancient Mysteries were identical and had a common 
origin from those of Egypt, a conclusion which has been reached by the 
same method of reasoning and comparison. 

" The legend of Osiris is the parent stock from which all the others 
came, but in Greece and Asia Minor the name Osiris disappeared, and 
that of Dionysus and Bacchus were substituted, while in the Hebrew 
Tyrean temple legend, the name of Hiram is found. The claim, how- 
ever, that the legend of Hiram is actual history, descriptive of events 
which really took place about the time of the building of King Solomon's 
temple, must be abandoned by the few who still blindly cling to it. 
Masonry can no longer hope to stand without criticism in this age of 
inquiry. There is a spirit abroad which does not hesitate to catch 
antiquity by its grey beard, stare into its wrinkled face, and demand 
upon what authority, of right reason, or authentic history it founds its 
pretensions. 

" The Masonic traditions cannot hope to escape examination in its 
turn ; and when it is examined, it will not stand the test, as claiming to 
be historically true. If, then, we have no explanation to offer, it must be 
discarded and take its place among many other exploded legends of the 
past. By showing, however, that it is not intended as an actual history, 
but is really a sublime allegory of great antiquity, teaching the pro- 
foundest truths of astronomy, and inculcating by an ancient system of 
types, symbols and emblems, an exalted code of morals, we at once reply 
to and disarm all that kind of criticism. The Masonic Fraternity is thus 
placed on a loftier plane and assumes a position which challenges the 
respect and admiration of both the learned and virtuous ; the learned 
because they will thus be enabled to recognize it as the depository of an 



398 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

ancient system of scientific knowledge ; the virtuous, because the Fra- 
ternity also stands revealed to them as having been in past ages the 
preserver of true worship and the teacher of morality and brotherly love. 

" It has been the boast of Masonry that its ritvial contained great 
scientific as well as moral truths. While this was plainly the fact as to 
the moral teachings of our Fraternity, to a large number of our most 
intelligent Brothers, the key which alone could unlock the Masonic 
treasury of Scientific Truth appeared to have been lost. We believe that 
key is at length restored ; for, if the Masonic traditions and legends, with 
the ritual illustrating them, are regarded as astronomical Allegories^ the 
light of scientific truth is at once seen to illuminate and permeate every 
part. If the explanations given in the foregoing pages are correct, any 
person who fully understands the meaning and intention of the legends 
and ceremonies, S3Miibols and emblems of our Fraternity, is necessarily 
well informed as to tlie sciences of Astronomy and Geometry, which form 
the foundation of all the others. 

" And why is not the explanation correct ? Have you ever consid- 
ered the 'caculus of probabilities,' as applied to a subject like this? That 
Masonry' should contain a single allusion to the Sun, might happen and 
imply nothing. The same might be said if it contained but three or 
four; but when we find the name of the Fraternity, the form, dimensions, 
lights, ornaments and furniture of its Lodge, and all the emblems, sym- 
bols, ceremonies, words and signs, without exception, allude to the annual 
circuit of the sun — that astronomical ideas and solar symbols are inter- 
woven into the very texture of the whole institution, and, what is still 
more significant, that there is such a Jiarnwny of relation existing 
between all these astronomical allusiojis, as to render the whole ritual capa- 
ble of a perfect and natural interpretation as an astronomical allegory, 
which is also one and complete — is overwhelming, and amounts to a posi- 
tive demonstration. There are millions of probabilities to one against 
the theory of the allegory being accidental, and not designed." < 

Now, if any earnest man or Mason will consider for a very short 
time upon the origin and antiquity of Ancient Masonry, he will realize 
at once that the guilds of practical operative Masons of Europe could 
never have designed or originated our glorious Fraternity of Masonry. 
The Builders of England, France, Germany and other European peoples, 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 399 

were skilled mechanics and architects, no doubt, for the work of their 
hands testify to the knowledge to which they had attained ; but beyond 
that the}'- could not go, only in the case, possibly, of some of the more 
prominent Architects, who were, most assuredly, not only skilful in the 
Arts and Sciences, but intellectually informed upon the Religions and 
Philosophies of the ancients, as well as those of their own age ; while the 
greater part of them were, no doubt, extremely ignorant, outside of their 
professions, and nearly as well educated as the ordinary mechanic or 
laborer of our own day, consequently it would have been simply impos- 
sible for them to have founded such an institution as our gloriovis Frater- 
nity, if they had made the attempt. 

Again, Freemasonry is, as I have previously stated, a peculiar 
system of Morality, veiled in Allegory and illustrated by Symbols iden- 
tical with those of the Ancient Mysteries, a fact which any thoughtful 
student of Masonry will most assuredly recognize. If he will earnestly 
study and carefully examine the ritualistic work of the Symbolic degrees, 
compare them with what he can learn of the Ancient Mysteries, he will 
certainly come to the conclusion that its antiquity rests upon an astro- 
nomical foundation, which can be traced back into remote ages of the 
past, when all the grand truths embodied in those beautiful Allegories 
were orally transmitted from generation to generation. 

A thorough knowledge of the diurnal and annual motions of the 
Sun-God Ra^ will furnish a key to open up to his view a knowledge of 
the sublime meaning which underlies the teachings, or ritualistic work, 
of our Symbolic degrees, leading him on through the Lesser and into the 
Greater Mysteries to the Ineffable degrees of the Ancient and Accepted 
Scottish Rite of Masonry. 

Christ himself taught by parables, not understood by many of his 
own disciples, and so it is with the Allegories and Symbols of Masonry, 
they are not understood or comprehended, I am sorry to say, by the great 
majority of our Brethren. But they have the key to the solution of them 
and if they would only give a little time and attention to the study of 
those beautiful symbols permeating every one of our degrees, they would 
soon begin to realize the sublime Theosophical and Philosophical Truths 
embodied in the ritualistic work of our Glorious Fraternity. Brother 
Buck says in his " Mystic Masonry : '' 



400 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

" The real secrets of Freemasonry lie in its Symbols, and the 
meaning of the Symbols reveals a profound philosophy and a universal 
science that has never been translated by man," and also states that " he 
desires to share the results of his personal observations with his Brothers, 
because it has revealed to him such priceless treasures, such precious 
jewels that will lead all who search to far greater discoveries. These 
jewels," he tells us, ''have not been concealed by accident, but by design, 
in order that they might, in some future age, be restored. Even the 
Stone that was rejected and became lost in the rubbish, not only bears an 
emblem and contains a mark, but is itself, from first to last, with its sur- 
roundings, a method of restoration and final use, a symbol. It is the 
center of a five-pointed star, which is the Kabalistic sign of Man. In 
one direction, it symbolizes the five senses, lost in the rubbish of passion 
and self-gratification. When this rejected or lost stone is recovered and 
sent to the King of the Temple (Man's Higher Self), and is recognized 
and restored, the arch is complete, and the gate-way of the senses gives 
entrance to the ' Palace of the King.' The result is Light or Illumina- 
tion. Such are the Illiamnati !''' 

The Zodiac is a broad belt in the heavens, i6° {degrees) wide. It is 
divided into twelve equal parts, called the Signs of the Zodiac. Each 
sign is 30° {degrees) long and divided in the centre by the Ecliptic, which 
cuts them into two equal parts, so that the Zodiac- lies 8° (degrees) each 
side of the Ecliptic or apparent path of the Sun, around the Earth, a 
journey it accomplishes in about three hundred and sixty-five days, 
five hours. 

When I was a boy at school we had an old rhyme by which we were 
taught to remember the various signs ; it is as follows : 

The Ram, the Bull, the heavenly Twins 

Next the crab, the Lion shines, 

The Virgin, and the Scales, 

The Scorpion, Archer and the Goat , 

The man that carries the Water-pot, 

The Fish with glittering tails. 

The whole of the Stellar world was filled by the ancient Egyptian 
Astronomers with imaginary figures of men, animals, etc., plainly traced 
all over the Heavens. But to that great glittering belt, stretching its 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 401 

serpent-like coil around the starry vault above, whicli we call the Zodiac, 
they assigned the chief stars, because they laid along the path of their 
glorious Sun-God " Ra," who, in his journeyings through the twelve 
signs, enacts the part of Hercules, iu performing the twelve labors 
ascribed to him. 

According to the procession of the equinox, we find that the Sun 
does not reach the same point each year, and the one where he crosses 
at the opening of Spring, coming North, is called the ]^crnal equinox^ 
while the one he crosses on his passage into the Southern hemisphere 
is called the Autumnal equinox. He reaches these two points the Vernal 
equinox, on or about the 21st day of March and the Autumnal.^ on or 
about the 21st day of September, at which time the days and nights are 
equal in both hemispheres. It reaches the solstitial point in the Northern 
hemisphere on or about the 21st day of June, when the days are longest 
and the nights the shortest in the North, and it attains the solstitial 
poiiit in the Southern hemisphere on or about the 21st day of December 
when the days are longest and the nights are the shortest. South of the 
equator. 

These two solstitial points. Cancer and Capricorn., were known to the 
ancients as the '■ Gates of Heaven," or the " Pillars of Hercules," be- 
yond which the Sun never passed. These two columns are to be found 
in our Blue Lodges of to-day and they are represented in our rituals as a 
circle, with a point in the centre, between two parallel lines, demonstrating 
the sun between the tropic of Cancer and Capricorn, or the Pillars of 
Hercules. 

Albert Pike says in " Morals and Dogmas," pag:; 465 : " The image 
of the sign in which each of the four seasons commenced, became the 
form under which was figured the Sun of that particular season. The 
Lion's skin was worn by Hercules ; the horns of the Bull adorned the 
forehead of Bacchus and the autumnal serpent wound its long folds round 
the Statue of Serapis, 2,500 years before our era ; when those signs cor- 
responded with the commencement of the seasons. When other constel- 
lations replaced them at those points, by means of the precession of the 
Equinoxes, those attributes were changed. Then the Ram furnished the 
horns for the head of the Sun, under the name of Jupiter Ammon. He 
was no longer born exposed to the waters of Aquarius, like Bacchus, nor 
26 



402 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

inclosed in an urn like the God Canopus ; but in the Stables of Augeas or 
the Celestial Goat. He then completed his triumph, mounted on an Ass, 
in the constellation Cancer, which then occupied the Solstitial point of 
Summer. 

" Other attributes the images of the Sun borrowed from the constella- 
tions which, by their rising and setting, fixed the points of the de- 
parture of the year, and the commencements of its four principal divisions. 

" First the Bull and afterwards the Ram (called by the Persians the 
Lamb) was regarded as the regenerator of Nature, through his union 
with the Sun. Each, in his turn, was an emblem of the Sun overcoming 
the winter darkness, and repairing the disorders of Nature, which every 
year was regenerated under these Signs, after the Scorpion and Serpent 
of Autumn had brought upon it barrenness, disaster and darkness. 
Mithras was represented sitting on a Bull ; and that animal was an 
image of Osiris ; while the Greek Bacchus armed its front with its horns, 
and was pictured with its tail and feet. 

" The Constellations also became notcAvorthy to the husbandman, 
which by their rising or setting, at morning or evening, indicated the 
coming of this period of renewed fruitfulness and new life. Capella, or 
the Kid Amalthea, whose horn is called that of abundance and whose 
place is over the equinoctional point, or Taurus ; and the Pleiades that 
long indicated the Seasons, and gave rise to a multitude of poetic fables, 
were the most observed and celebrated in antiquity." 

The ancient Egyptians named every star shining in the infinitude of 
space, and gave to the signs of the Zodiac the self-same names they 
bear to-day, from some event or occurrence which happened on or about 
the time of their rising in the east, in the early evening, or just after 
sunset, in the same manner that the appearance of Anubis upon the 
Eastern horizon indicated the approach of the annual inundations of the 
Nile, so the various constellations or signs of the Zodiac, appearing in the 
East about sunset, presages of some event of equal importance, or pointed 
out to them some duty that shoiild not be neglected. 

As an instance of this, Taurus signified when it was time to plow and 
till the soil, and to sow the seed for the reaping later on. When Virgo 
appeared, if old god Nilus had granted their request and overflowed the 
river banks at the proper time, and permitted the parched and thirstv soil 



EGYPT. THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 40S 

to drink in sufficient to fructify the land and cause the seeds and plants to 
grow in abundance, then the Virgin harvest would soon be read}' for the 
reaping. When Cancer appeared it informed them of the backward 
movement that is made by the Sun, apparently, in his descending course 
toward the Autumnal Equinox. The Lions, drinking from the river at 
certain times, indicate the approach of that constellation Leo, followed by 
the sign marking the Summer's Solstice, and the silver sickle of this 
constellation presaged the golden harvest of Virgo. This very welcome 
sign is represented as a beautiful Virgin, holding in her hand the 
ripened ear of wheat, indicating that the golden grain was now ready for 
the harvesting; then joy and gladness would fill the land, the people 
would rejoice and be happy throughout the Land of Egypt. Feasting, 
festivals and grand processions were alwaj^s in order during years of 
abundance, but sorrow, woe and mourning when gaunt famine appeared. 
Libra, or the balance^ told of equal days and nights in both hemispheres. 

When the lurid Scorpio gazed across the sandy deserts of Arabia, it 
warned all those who travelled across the trackless waste of sands to be 
very careful, for on or about the time of its appearance the Simoon of the 
desert would begin to blow and produce terrific sand-storms, so dense and 
smothery that very often those who were caught in them would lose their 
lives, not being able to escape from them. At such times the wind would 
blow, fierce and strong, lifting stones, pieces of shells, etc., to dash them 
with dreadful force into the faces of unfortunate travelers, cutting the 
skin and flesh, drawing blood, and often causing intense pain, like the 
sting of a Scorpion, hence the name of this sign. 

With Scorpio comes the most important signs of the Zodiac to the 
Masonic student, for now the Sun, having passed under the malign 
influence of the venomous Scorpio, becomes weak and weary when com- 
mencing the battle with the Archer, whose terrible darts wound him full 
sore, until finally overcome and slain by Sagittarius, and carried off by 
the terrible Capricornus into the depths of Winter Soistice where he 
remained for three days. Like the Goat which climbs the giddy heights 
of the mountain-side, where 3'awning chasms are tremendous, he re-incar- 
nates once again and resurrected, comes forth from out the realms of 
darkness, sin and sorrow and suffering into grander heights of happiness 
and immortality. 



i0¥ 



404 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Thus eacli and every sign of the Zodiac was fraught with a deep 
significance ; but more especially to the initiated, because they, having 
the key to their esoteric meaning, saw in all the motions of the Sun 
along the Ecliptic a most profound, Sublime and Philosophical meaning 
which constituted the base of all religions and Philosophies. It is no 
wonder, therefore, that they viewed with awe and admiration the Birth, 
Life, Death and Re-incarnation of their glorious Sun-God Ra, for to them 
it demonstrated that there is no death, and proved the immortality of the 
soul. 

The earnest Masonic stvident who is desirous of proving the anti- 
quity of our glorious Fraternity, as well as to identify the teachings of our 
own beloved Scottish Rite with those of the ancient Mysteries, will have 
ample proof if he pursues his studies along these lines of Astronomical 
ideas and comes to an understanding of the true meaning underlying 
those sublime and beautiful s3anbols which have existed since time 
immemorial. On man}' of the coins and medals coined in different cities 
of the ancient world, are to be found carved or impressed the various 
signs of the Zodiac, Planets or Stars, showing the high estimation placed 
upon them by different people in different parts of the world. 

In India the twelve signs of the Zodiac appeared complete on many 
coins, and on the medals struck to honor Antoninus are to be seen 
the greater portion of the magnificent signs which adorned the pathway 
of the Sun-God Ra, in his journe}^ around the world. 

Upon the medals of Antioch and the other Syrian cities appeared the 
Ram [AriL's) and the crescent Moon. The Ram, singl}', was the special 
Deity of Syria. The Egyptian Apis, or the sign Taurus {the BuU)^ 
was engraved on the coins of man}' of the cities of Greece, Athens 
especially. 

Many of the coins of Persia bore upon their face Sagittarius, 
{The Archer^. On the medals made in honor of the Kings of Comegena 
(a part of Syria above Cilicia), appeared Scorpio {The Scorpion). On 
the seal of Locri (a town in Magna Graciaj, was to be found HESPERUS, 
{The Planet Venus). And on the coins of Zeugma and other towns 
which adorned the banks of the Euphrates, in Mesopotamia, was carved 
the symbol so often and familiarly spoken of in connection with our 
beloved Fraternity — Carpricornus, (The Goat). 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 405 

" Tlie Phoenicians and Egyptians," says Eusebius, " were the first 
who ascribed divinity to the sun, moon and stars, and regarded them as 
the sole causes of the production and destruction of all beings. From 
them went abroad, over all the world, all known opinions as to the gener- 
ations and descent of the gods. Only the Hebrews looked beyond the 
visible world to an invisible Creator. All the rest of the world regarded 
as gods those luminous bodies which blaze in the firmament, offered 
them sacrifices, bowed down before them and raised neither their souls 
nor their worship above the visible heavens. 

'' The Chaldeans, Canaanites and Sj^rians, among whom Abraham 
lived, did the same. The Canaanites consecrated horses and chariots to 
the sun. The inhabitants of Emesa in Phoenicia adored him under the 
name of Elagabalus ; and the sun as Hercules, was the great Deity 
of the Tyrians. The Syrians worshipped with fear and dread the stars 
of the constellation Pisces and consecrated images of them in their 
temples. The sun, as Adonis, was worshipped in Byblos and about 
Mount Lebanus. There was a magnificent temple of the sun at 
Palmyra, which was pillaged by the soldiers of Aurelian, who rebuilt it 
and dedicated it anew. The Pleiades, under the name of Succoth-Beneth, 
were worshipped by the Babylonian colonists who settled in the country 
of the Samaritans. Saturn, under the name Ramphan, was worshipped 
among the Copts. The planet Jupiter was worshipped as Bel or Baal ; 
Mars as Malac, Melech or Moloch ; Venus as Ashtaroth, or Astarte, and 
Mercury as Nebo, among the Syrians, Assyrians, Phoenicians and 
Canaanites. Sanchoniathon says that the earliest Phoenicians adored 
the Sun, whom they deemed sole Lord of the heavens, and honored him 
under the name Beel-Samin, signifying King of Heaven. They raised 
columns to the elements, fire and air, or wind, and worshipped them, 
and Sabaeism, or the worship of the stars, flourished everywhere in 
Babylonia." 

The Arabs, under a sky always clear and serene, adored the sun, 
moon and stars, as Abulfaragius informs us, and that each of the twelve 
Arab tribes invoked a particular star as its patron. The tribe Hamyar 
was consecrated to the sun, the tribe of Camiah to the moon, the tribe 
Misa was under the protection of the beautiful star in Tauras — Alde- 
baran ; the tribe Tai under that of Canopus ; the tribe Kais^ of Sirius ; 



406 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

the tribes Lackavms and Idanius of Jupiter ; the tribe Asad of Mercury ; 
and so on. 

The Saracens, in the time of Heraclius, worshipped Venus, whom 
they called Cabaar, or The Great; and they swore by the sun, moon 
and stars. Shahaistan, an Arabic author, says that the Arabs and 
Indians before his time had temples dedicated to the Seven Planets. 
Albufaragius says that the Seven Great Primitive nations, from whom 
all the others descended, the Persians, Chaldeans, Greeks. Bgyptians, 
Turks, Indians and Chinese, all originally were Sabeanists and wor- 
shipped the stars. They all, he says, like the Chaldeans, prayed, 
turning toward the North Pole, three times a day, at sunrise, noon and 
sunset, bowing themselves three times before the sun. They invoked 
the stars and intelligences which inhabited them, offered them sacrifices 
and called the fixed stars and planets gods. 

Philo says that the Chaldeans regarded the stars as sovereign 
arbiters of the order of the world and did not look beyond the visible 
causes to any invisible or intellectual being. They regarded NATURE as 
the great divinity, which exercised its powers through the action of its 
parts, the sun, moon, planets and fixed stars, the successive revolutions 
of the seasons' and the combined action of heaven and earth. The great 
feast of the Sabeans was when the sun reached the Vernal Equiuox. 
They had five other feasts at the time when the five minor planets 
entered the signs in which they had their exaltation. 

Diodorus Siculus informs us " that the Egyptians recognized two 
great Divinities, primary and eternal, the sun and moon, which they 
thought governed the world, and from which everything receives its 
nourishment and growth ; that on them depended all the great work of 
generation and the perfection of all effects produced in nature. We 
know the two great Divinities of Egypt were Osiris and Isis, the greatest 
agents of nature ; according to some, the sun and moon, and according 
to others, heaven and earth, or the active and passive principles of 
generation." 

And we learn from Porphyry that Chaereman, a learned priest of 
Egypt, and many other learned men of that nation, said, that the 
Egyptians recognized as gods the stars comprising the Zodiac, and all 
those by their rising or setting marked its divisions ; the subdivisions of 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 407 

the signs into decans, the horoscope, and the stars presiding therein, 
which are called Potent Chiefs of Heaven. Considering the Sun as the 
Great God, Architect, and Ruler of the World, they explained, not only 
the fable of Osiris and Isis, but generally all their sacred legends by the 
stars, b}^ their appearance and disappearance, by their ascension, by the 
phases of the Moon, and the increase and diminution of her light; by 
the march of the Sun, the division of it and the heavens into two parts, 
one assigned to darkness and the other to light. 

Diodorus also informs us " that the Egyptians acknowledged two 
great Gods, the Sun and Moon, or Osiris and Isis, who govern the world 
and regulate its administration by the dispensation of the seasons. . . . 
Such is the nature of these two great Divinities, that they impress an 
active and fecundating force, by which the generation is eifected ; the 
Sun, by heat and that spiritual principle which forms the breath of the 
winds ; the Moon, b}^ humidity and dryness ; and both b}^ the forces of 
the air which they share in common. By this beneficial influence every- 
thing is born, grows and vegetates. Wherefore this whole huge body in 
which nature resides, is maintained by the combined action of the Sun 
and Moon, and their five qualities — the principles, spiritual, fiery, dry, 
humid and airy." 

Now we positively know that without these various principles 
nothing could grow, for every seed implanted within the bosom of 
" Mother Earth," requires Air to vitalize the Life essence, or Prana, 
within its quivering form, and moisture to swell the protoplasmic forces 
surrounding the germ. Under these conditions, therefore, the spirit 
lying dormant within the heart of the seed will at once manifest itself in 
growth and Life. These elements were recognized by the nations of 
antiquity, who looked upon the Sun, Moon and Stars as the embodiment 
and symbols of the Deity producing these elements, the real and essen- 
tial cause of both Evolution and Involution, or of Generation and 
Destruction. According to Champollion : 

'' The tomb of Rameses V, at Thebes, contains tables of the constel- 
lations and of their influence for every hour, of every month of the year. 
Thus, in the latter half of the month of Tobi, Orion rules and influences, 
at the first hour, the left arm; Sirius at the second, influences the hcaii ; 
the Twins, at the third, the arms, and so on." There is a papyrus in the 



408 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

British jMuseum, of the age of Rameses III, which contains a division of 
the da^-s of the year into luck}^ and unlnck_v ones. On the sarcophagus 
of Rameses IV, the twent3--four hours are represented, showing the 
antiquity of this division. Each has a star placed above it and a figure ; 
twelve males, representing the daj-, have their faces turned toward the 
God Horus, the representative of the Sun ; twelve females, towards a 
crocodile, the S3^mbol of darkness. 

In a great astronomical picture from the tombs at Beb-el-]\Ielook, a 
variet}^ of circumstances connected with the rising and setting of the 
stars are evidentl}^ indicated ; but in the present state of our knowledge 
it is impossible to give the meaning of the Eg^'ptian characters. 

Donnellv, in his '' Atlantis," page 454, saj-s that : " There are actual 
astronomical calculations in existence, with calenders formed upon them, 
which eminent astronomers of England and France admit to be genuine, 
and true, and which carry back the antiquit}- of the science of astronomy, 
together with the constellations to within a few j^ears of the Deluge, even 
on the longer chronologj^ of the Septuagint (see " Miracles in Stone," 
page 142). 

Josephus attributes the invention of the constellations to the famil}^ 
of the antediluvian Seth, the son of Adam, while Origen affirms that it 
was asserted in the Book of Enoch, that in the time of that patriarch the 
constellations were alread}- divided and named. The Greeks associated 
the origin of Astronomy with Atlas and Hercules, Atlantean kings or 
heroes. The Eg3-ptians regarded Taut (At ?) or Thoth, or At-hotes, as 
the originator of both astronomy and the alphabet ; doubtless he repre- 
sented a civilized people by whom their country was originally colonized. 
Bailey and others assert that astronomj^ must have been established when 
the summer solstice was in the first degree of Virgo, and that the Solar 
and Lunar Zodiacs were of similar antiquity, which would be about four 
thousand years before the Christian Era. 

"The signs of the Zodiac were certainly in use among the Egyptians 
one thousand seven hundred and twenty-two years before Christ. One of 
the learned men of our own da}', who for fift}^ years labored to decipher 
the hierogl3'phics of the ancients, found upon a mummy-case in the 
British ]\Iuseum a delineation of the signs of the Zodiac, and the position 
of the planets ; the date to which they pointed was the autumnal equinox 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 409 

of tlie year B. c. 1722. Professor Mitchell, to whom the fact was commu- 
nicated, employed his assistants to ascertain the exact position of the 
heavenly bodies belonging to our Solar system on the equinox of that 
year. This was done and a diagram furnished by parties ignorant of his 
object, which showed that on the 7th of October, b. c. 1722, the moon 
and planets occupied the exact position in the heavens marked upon the 
cof&n in the British Museum " (Goodrich's " Columbus," page 22). 

And so it is with all astronomical statements, if we carefully 
examine them we shall find each and every one to be perfectly correct, 
and I consider this subject to be of the deepest iuterest, to not only the 
]\Iasonic student, but to all men who are desirous of comprehending the 
profound depth of astronomical knowledge pertaining to the ancient 
people who lived in the Golden Age of Bgypt. 



^ Foliage ujp tTjc Xilr— l3rsrviption oi Coml)! 
antr Ccmplcs— ^;3ro 13oric Columns, 



4U 



"Smooth went our boat along the summer seas. 
Leaving— for so it seemed— a world behind. 
Its cares, its sounds, its shadows; we reclined 

Clpon the sunny deck, heard but the breccc 

Chat whispered through the palms, or idly played 
dith the lithe flag aloft— a forest scene 
On cither side drew its slope line of green, 

Hnd hung the water's edge with shade. 
■ Hbove thy woods, Memphis ! pyramids pak 

peered as wc passed; and Nile's soft a2urc hue, 
Glcamirg 'mid the grey desert, met the view; 

^hcrc hung at intervals the scarce seen sail.'*^ 



412 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 41? 



CHAPTER XVIII. 

A VOYAGE UP THE NILE— DESCRIPTION OF TOMBS AND TEMPLES- 
PRO DORIC COLUMNS. 

(sj\ FTER leaving tlie Fa3'um we made our way to Wasta, for the pur- 
^^ pose of getting our mail, and went on up to Beni-Suef, by the cars, 

^^ — ' as there was little to be seen that would interest any one on the 
river between these two places. It becomes quite monotonous, simply 
watching sandy banks, palm groves and the same peculiar features of the 
villages we pass on our way into Upper Egypt. There is very little to 
occasion amusement or to excite interest in the river scenery until you 
begin to approach Beni-Suef. 

This town has a population of about twelve thousand inhabitants, is 
located twenty-two miles from Wasta and seventy-two from Cairo. It 
contains both post and telegraph offices and a railway station, the steamers 
stopping here, discharge their freight and passengers, and take on others 
going to the South. It is very seldom though that passengers are left 
here, excepting natives, or those Europeans and Americans who intend 
going into the Fayum, by the road leading to the brick Pyramid of iT/ 
Laliun. They sometimes take on passengers who like ourselves have 
" done " the Fayum. The wharfs and banks of the river are crowded 
with quite a number of regular, dirty Nile boats, and there are a few build- 
ings erected close to the river ; but the town proper lies quite a wa}' back 
from the river front, the houses being built of sun-dried bricks of Nile 
mud, present no new features to us. It has a bazar, fairly well supplied 
with merchandise of the usual articles seen in such places ; but there is 
little of interest in this town, although it presents a very prettj^ view from 
the river, for the island is well covered with vegetation of all kinds, and 
the house of the Khedive looked quite charming peeping out from behind 
its leaf}^ screen. The chief industries of Beni-Suef are carpet and linen, 
of a much inferior quality to what it was in the time of Leo Africanus, 
when this town was noted for its manufacture of fine linen fabrics ; in fact 



41-1 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

it used to supply the whole of Egypt with flax, and exported large quan- 
tities to the varioiis cities along the Mediterranean Sea. 

From this place we start to do Upper Egypt in a Dahabiyeh, a mode 
of travel suiting myself and companions better than any other. It was, 
of course, more expensive than either cars or steamer ; but we realized that 
wherever we should desire to stop, we would always have our home with 
us, on the river banks, with such comforts and accommodations as can 
only be truly appreciated and enjoyed. After long and weary tramping 
across the drifting desert sands, to examine some ruined tomb or temple, 
or some point of interest and come back to a refreshing bath, a good 
meal and the luxuries of a good, quiet resting place is an inexpressible 
convenience, I can assure you. 

We had made all necessary arrangements for our boat, before 
leaving Cairo, to meet us at Beni-Suef On our arrival at that place 
our Dragoman met us, and with the assistance of some of our sailors 
we were escorted, bag and baggage, to our clean and home-like quarters, 
where we found everything as nice and pleasant as could possibly be 
expected, under the circumstances, as we had arrived a day before our 
time. Under the superintendence of our bijou of a Dragoman we were, 
nevertheless, soon made as comfortable as could be desired, and that night, 
after dinner, we sat on the deck of our boat, under the glittering stars of 
an unclouded sky, smoking our cigars and chatting of the wonders of the 
Fayum, and on retiring were lulled to sleep b\' the rippling waters of the 
river Nile. 

We were in no particular hurry to complete our journey, as my com- 
panions and I were going through this extraordinary countr}^ for the 
pleasure of seeing some of the stupendous fabrics belonging to the civil- 
ization of a prehistoric age. Accompanied by these genial associates I 
was going into the valley of the Nile with a determination to see all that 
was to be seen, and to study for myself the gigantic remains of the Tombs, 
Temples, Monuments and Mummies scattered promiscuously from one 
end of this interesting valley to the other, searching for evidences of our 
glorious fraternity amid the debris of departed ages. Realizing the 
immeasurable beuefits conferred upon mankind by its teachings, descend- 
ing from generation to generation, through all the vicissitudes and muta- 
tions of time, I was endeavoring, by these researches, to arrive at an 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 415 

intelligent understanding of the Arts, Sciences and Philosophies belong- 
ing to the Ancient Egyptians long centuries before Homer sang of " Hun- 
dred gated Thebes." My companions and I had travelled together through 
many parts of India, and had done considerable of Bgypt in each other's 
company. We thoroughly understood each other's peculiarities, and, 
consequently knew that no " Dahabiyeh Devil " could ever disturb the 
pleasure of our voyage. 

Our berths had been selected before leaving Cairo, so that now every- 
thing had been nicely arranged for our comfort when we went on board 
our boat at this village of Beni Suef. I had laid in an abundant supply 
of cigars, and a thousand and one other articles I would need during the 
voyage. My companions had done the same ; but before starting we 
strolled up to the bazar to make a few purchases and while Ave were look- 
ing at the various wares exposed for sale, my boy Salame, came rushing 
up to inform us that a fine fresh breeze was springing up from the 
North and that everything was in readiness for our departure, con- 
sequently we hurried off down to the wharf, stepped on board our 
dahabiyeh, the ropes were cast off, the sails hoisted and we went plowing 
along towards the steep and rocky cliffs which adorn the east bank of the 
Nile. 

It reminded me of the happy days of long ago, to stand once more 
on board a dahabiyeh, to see the great big lateen sails swelling out before 
a good stiff north wind and hear the water rippling along under our 
quarter. Our boat scudded along upon the bosom of this famous river and 
we watched the ever changing scenery of the fertile fields upon the banks, 
with occasionally here and there a village to attract our attention. It was 
one continuous panorama of cotton, cane, clover, tasseled corn, sweet 
scented bean fields, purple lupins, and palm groves, with now and then 
the white-washed walls of a Sheik's tomb, or white minaret peeping out 
from amid the dense foliage surrounding them. The tall black chimneys 
of some sugar plantation occasionally came into view, while pigeon 
towers, with clouds of fluttering birds around them, seemed ever to be 
coming and going. We could hear at times the loud hoarse scream of a 
locomotive that was passing, the noise of which scared the white paddy 
birds and others from the banks of the river and the small islands dotting 
the stream on our way. 



416 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Ever}^ new village of mud-dried bricks was like the one just passed 
and the same river was rushing by, upon whose placid bosom drifted the 
magnificent barge of the renowned Cleopatra, now cut by the prow of our 
swiftly gliding boat. How dream}^ the air and how beautiful the 
scenery! One must see for himself its wondrous charms, to be able 
fully to appreciate and enjoy the delightful pleasure of a voyage up the 
Nile in an Arab boat, manned by an Arab crew and under the super- 
vision of a good Dragoman. It was one continuous round of ecstacy to be 
away from the cares of the world, with its pleasures and its pains, 
leaving civilization far behind as we sailed along upon the bosom of a 
mighty river. 

Warburton says, in " Crescent and the Cross," page i8o, " No words 
can convey an idea of the beaut}^ and delightfulness of tropical weather, 
at least while any breeze from the north is blowing. There is a pleasure 
in the very act of breathing, a voluptuous consciousness that existence 
is a blessed thing ; the pulse beats high, but calmly ; the eye feels 
expanded, the chest heaves pleasurably as if air was a delicious draught 
to thirsty lungs, and the mind takes its coloring, and cha,racter from 
sensation. No thought of melancholy ever darkens over us ; no painful 
sense of isolation or of loneliness, as day after day we pass on through 
silent deserts, upon the silent and solemn river. One seems, as it were 
removed into another state of existence ; and all strifes and struggles 
of that from which we have emerged seem to fade, softened into 
indistinctness." 

This might}^ river has echoed to the demonstrated thoughts of a 
nation that had risen to wondrous heights of Science, Arts and Philoso- 
phies long centuries before the harps of Israel grew melodious with the 
songs of David ; whose history can be deciphered, not only in the 
hieroglj'phic inscriptions written with pens of steel and bronze and her 
mummied dead, but also in her works of Art which adorned the banks 
of this grand old river Nile before the dawn of histor}^ These works 
demonstrate the extent of knowledge to which this ancient people had 
attained long centuries before Abraham came from Chaldea. 

Who can tell when Egypt first began to develop, with gigantic 
strides, her onward march to civilization ? How, when, or from whence 
she received her wondrous knowledge ? We know not, and can only 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 417 

partially guess that she received it from the " Land of the Vedas." We 
can see the effect of the Wisdom that pertained to the people who built 
the stupendous Tombs, Temples and Monuments, whose ruins to-day lie 
scattered around, from one end of this remarkable valley to the other. 
Although a great majority of those extraordinary fabrics have crumbled 
into dust, becoming mixed with the drifting sands of the desert, and blown 
by the winds of heaven to the four cardinal points of the universe ; yet, 
to-day, in this twentieth centur}', our most eminent men stand with 
bowed heads in admiration before the very vestiges of their departed glory. 
With silent but impressive tongues they impart to us the very thoughts 
of the people of ancient Egypt to whose knowledge and skill the world is 
indebted for these majestic tombs, temples and monolithic statues, whose 
very ruins command our most profound respect and admiration. 

A sight in Upper Egypt never to be forgotten is the imposing 
effect of the setting sun upon the surrounding scenery. When the heat 
of the day has passed, the shadows of the palm trees lengthen out and go 
creeping across the Western bank, down into the flowing waters of the 
river. The deep recesses of the yellow cliffs of the mountains approach 
closer to the Nile, on the East, taking on a deep violet color, while their 
faces are lit up with a ruddy golden hue, changing again into a lovely 
roseate tinge, successively passing through all the colors of the rainbow. 
On the West bank the palms turn into a deeper bronze against the 
crimson and gold of the Western horizon, and as the glowing sun sank 
from our view, the mountains in the East changed to a very peculiar 
greenish grey color. The heavens above were illumined with an indescrib- 
able halo of glory, followed by a deep and beautiful blue, which gradually 
faded into a deeper and deeper tint, until finally the golden yellow, red 
and pink colors gradually dissolve and the blue became more clearly 
defined. One by one the stars began to appear in the azure vault above, 
a soft tremulous glow of twilight fell upon the scene, soon to fade away, 
and another day had passed and gone forever across the threshold of 
eternity. All that was left to remind us of its passing was the halo of light, 
the after-glow flashing up from the West-Gate in streams of light, lasting 
but for a short time, thus closing the day by the command of the 
Supreme Architect of the Universe, and darkness covered the face of the 
earth. From out the depths of the gloom came the lowing of cattle, the 
27 



418 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

voices of the fellaheen upon the banks of the river, as they return home- 
ward from their labors of the day, and the swish of the waters of the river 
as our boat went sailing, with a light breeze, over the shimmering bosom 
of the glorious river Nile. 

We passed islands thickly populated with paddy birds, rising in 
clouds at our approach and flying over to the western shore to disappear 
among the vegetation which lines its banks. We passed Bibba, with its 
peculiar looking Coptic convent, whose roof was covered with numerous 
little mud domes, and noticed quite a number of pelicans, herons, lap- 
wings, purple Nile geese, and heard the shriek of the whistle of a locomotive 
as it went rushing by, with its motley crowd of passengers. As the sun 
Avent down in crimson and gold the wind died out and our captain sheered 
the boat into the bank of the river, the tall flapping sails were furled, and 
we tied up for the night under the glittering stars of an Egyptian sky. 

Our sailors gathered around the fire for their evening meal and soon 
afterward the air resounded to their double pipe and drum. The guttural 
notes of an Arab love song rang out upon the stillness of the night, every 
verse of which was sung as a solo, but the last two lines were generally 
repeated by the whole crew, as a chorus, accompanied by clapping of 
hands, the beating of drum, and the shrill quick notes of the double pipe. 
They never seem to tire of singing, and every one of them seems to be 
fairly good performers on the pipe and drum. This latter instrument is 
simply an earthen vessel, with a skin stretched over the open end. (We 
afterwards procured two good tambourines for them.) The}' usually beat 
the drum as a tambourine with the open hand. Every night, whether 
sailing on the grand old river, or tied up to the bank, they gather in a 
circle and sing their songs and laugh and jest with each other like so 
many boys, until they tire, when they wrap themselves in their white 
capotes and seek the drowsy God. Some of these songs are quite humor- 
ous, others grave and sentimental. I shall quote you two songs that were 
translated especially for Eliot Warburton and his " Crescent and, Cross : " 

SERENADE. 

I' Come forth, bright girl, and midnight skies 
Will think that morning's gate uncloses ; 
The dazzled dew will think thine eyes 
Are suns, and vanish from the roses. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 419 

Allah ! how my heart-strings stir ! 
Harp-like, touched by thought of her ! 
Holy prophet ! blessed be thou ! 
Fairest maiden, hear my vow ! 

"The rich red wine seems mantling high 
Within thy cheeks so roseate glowing, 
And beauty-drunkenness through mine eye 
Is all my fevered heart o'erflowing. 
Blessed Allah ! send thy grace ! 
Blessed Allah ! make my face 
White, before thy presence dread 
Wakes to life the slumbering dead. 

The following is quite a favorite among the boatmen of the Nile : 
THE MOTHER TO HER DAUGHTER. 

MOTHER. 

My daughter, 'tis time that thou wert wed. 
Ten summers already have shone o'er thy head ; 
I must find thee a husband, if, under the sun, 
The conscript-catcher has left us one. 

DAUGHTER. 

Dear mother, one husband will never do 
I have so much love, that I must have two ; 
And I'll find for each, as you shall see, 
More love than both can bring to me. 

One husband shall carry a lance so bright ; 
He shall roam the desert for spoil by night ; 
And when morning lights up the dark palm-tree 
He shall find sweet welcome home from me. 

The other a sailor bold shall be ; 
He shall fish all day in the deep blue sea ; > 
And when evening brings his hour of rest, 
He shall find repose on this faithful breast. 

MOTHER. 

There's no chance, my child, of a double match 
For men are scarce, and hard to catch ; 
So I fear you i?iusf make one husband do. 
And try to love him as well as two. 



420 EGYPT. THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Our crew consisted of a Reis (Captain) a Pilot, twelve sailors, one 
good cook, a second cook, two good servants, a man to wash and iron and 
help in the cabin, one bo}^ cook for the sailors and a dragoman who had 
charge of the whole outfit, subject of course to our special desire. 
These had been outlined in an agreement drawn up at oitr Consulate, 
duly signed and witnessed. I unist certainly admit that the agreement 
was kept to the very letter, consequently the entire crew were liberally re- 
membered when the question of bak-sheesh was considered at the expira- 
tion of our voyage. 

Ah, what glorious uights were spent in our journey up that grand 
old river Nile. This night, especially, was enjoyable beyond expression, 
as each object around was enhanced and softened by the lovely moonlit 
rays. The very mountains stood out sharp and clearly defined under 
the silvery light of the brilliant moon ; the radiant stars seemed 
to sparkle with indescribable splendor and beaut}-. Old god Nilus 
flowed quietly by, without a ripple upon its surface, and not a sound 
disturbed the silence of the night. The very air we breathed seemed 
full of quiet reverie, a dreamy indescribable feeling seemed to steal o'er us, 
and we were lost in our own thoughts. We were in the heart of the 
Land of the Pharaohs, upon the ver}- river which bore upon its throbbing 
bosom the rush cradle wherein slept the infant IMoses, and no doubt these 
very hills and banks have resounded to the laughter of Mark Antony and 
Cleopatra, with their attendants, as they floated o'er the flowing waters 
of the river in her gilded barge. Philosophers and learned men of every 
age have watched these self-same stars, under just as glorious a sky as 
shone down upon us that night. As we sat enwrapped in the majesty of 
its divine light memories of the grandeur of Egypt in her " Golden 
Age " came back to us and we saw, in fanc}-, the hundred gated Thebes, 
the glory of Memphian splendor, statelj^ Heliopolis and the glorious 
cities of the dim and misty past, which, in imagination, we peopled again, 
as in the da3's of Ancient Egyptian splendor, when the Arts and Spiences 
were flourishing long before the Sphinx looked to the East. What an 
extraordinary panorama of events passed in review before us, comprising 
epochs of advanced knowledge, whose precepts and teachings were to be 
lost through successive ages ; long processions of conquering armies 
and the domination of the imperial Csesars, down to the Egypt of to-day. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 421 

Our reverie came abruptly to an end, and we retired to our cabin to 
dream in the arms of Morpheus, of white robed and leopard-clad priests, 
and vestal virgins performing their mystic rites and ceremonies, who 
crown us with laurel wreaths and lotus buds as they lead us up to their 
altar of Fire to receive the Light. As we prostrate ourselves before its 
radiance we awake with a start to find the Sun God Ra looking down 
upon us from his throne on high, and the jarring, jangling sound of a 
gong reverberating throughout the cabin, proclaiming the approach of 
our morning meal. 

We took our regular morning plunge into the river, had our coffee 
presented to us by our dragoman, Hassan, who told us that we were 
close to the town of Feshn, and he pointed out to us the white-washed 
walls of the houses a short distance from the river. 

This town is situated twenty-four miles from our starting-place, 
Beni Suef, and ninety-six miles from Cairo. It is surrounded with iinely 
cultivated fields, gardens, palm groves, pomegranate trees, a variety of 
shrubs and all kinds of vegetables. We strolled out upon the bank of the 
river, gun in hand accompanied by Salame, and in a very short time we 
shot two or three brace of red-legged partridges, a couple of dozen quail 
and returned to the boat to enjoy our breakfast "' al fescoP As we sat un- 
der the awning, shaded from the glowing rays of the morning sun, our 
sailors harnessed themselves to the tow line and reis Abdallah sheered our 
boat off from the bank, and we went crawling along, accompanied by the 
sounding voices of the sailors upon the tow path. Soon a light air sprung 
up, our boat gathered head-way as the large sails swelled out, full and round 
before the freshening wind, when the men dropped the tow line, wrapped 
their scanty clothing around their heads, plunged into the river and came 
swimming alongside like so many tritons, with glistening skins and laugh- 
ing faces, and as we sailed by the water front of Feshn, pur sailors seemed 
to loose themselves in song and music. The sound of the drum, tam- 
bourines and pipes resounded over the river, the people gathered upon the 
banks and watched us as our boat went gliding by, like some gigantic bird 
o'er the sparkling waters. 

A few miles above Feshn, upon the Fast bank of the river, we saw 
El-Kebi or Medinet el-Gahil, which marks the site of a very ancient 
Egyptian town. The site and fortifications can be plainly traced by the 



422 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

remains of the houses and ancient forts said to have been constructed by 
Men-Kheeper-Ra and Isis-em-Kheb against invasions from the North, on 
which side it is most strong!}' fortified. These fortifications run clear 
down to the river and out upon the rocks. We noticed that many of the 
bricks used in the building of this town and fortifications were marked 
with the names of both the High Priest of Thebes and his wife. There 
appears to have been a very fine stone quay or landing place, built 
quite close to the river and numerous tombs of all kinds just outside the 
town. The old city of Hipponon lies a couple of miles from these ruins, 
ofi" to the South-east. In the ancient days of Pharaonic history it was 
the capital of the XVIIIth Nome of Upper Egypt. We passed El-Fent^ 
located quite a distance back from the river, on the West bank amidst 
fertile fields, palm groves and gardens. 

After rounding the bend of the river we saw Malaieya and the site of 
some very ancient mounds, also, on the West bank, but close to the river, 
and for the first time in quite a distance, fields of waving grain again 
came into view upon the East bank, and just beyond this vegetation, 
under the shadow of the table mountain of Gebel-Shekh Enibarak^ we saw 
the site of an ancient city, which was in the height of its glory during 
the Roman domination. In this place we found the remains of an ancient 
flint manufactory, as the ground was literally strewn with flint implements 
of all kinds. The wind continued to blow softly in our favor, so we kept 
on our way southward, sailing by the rock}' shores on the east and turn- 
ing arouud the curving bank of the river, we sailed by a large island and 
discovered Maghagha, off to our right on the West bank surroi:nded by 
extensive sugar plantations. 

There is a very large sugar factory here which is well worth seeing, 
besides a post-ofiice and railway station. During the cane harvest it is a 
very busy place, but at other times is quite dull. The river here grew 
very wide, interspersed with several small islands, and a short distance 
above the town were numerous sand bars which seemed to be a favorite 
resort for all kinds of wild foul. 

A little farther on we passed Hagar-es-Salam^ the "Stone of Welfare," 
which is a large rock in the river, close to the shore. It had received its 
peculiar name from a superstition existing among the Nile boatmen. 
They believe a voyage down the river would not be prosperous until it 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 423 

is passed. We now noticed that the mountains bordering the river for 
quite a distance began to recede toward the East. 

We passed Sharona on the East bank and Aba on the West, with 
ruins of ancient cities on both sides of the river. The wind freshened as 
we went careening along, by sand bars and small islands, inhabited by 
great flocks of birds who rose in clouds as we neared them. 

We soon sighted Abu Gtrga, on the West bank, which boasts of a post- 
office besides a telegraph and railway station. It is a very fine looking 
place from the river, centered in a beautiful cultivated plain. The town 
is about half an hour's walk from the landing, surrounded with fine palm 
groves, flowering shrubs and some very extensive mounds. About eight 
miles to the West, on the Bahr Yusuf^ and near the edge of the desert is 
located Behnesa (the ancient city of Oxyrrhinkhos)^ in the Nome of Sep^ 
a point of departure for all desiring to visit the Little Oasis or WoJi el- 
Bahariya^ {the Oasis Parva of the Romans). It is about four days' jour- 
ney from Behnesa and is reached, generally, by sumpter camels Avhich 
travel about three to five miles per hour, on the average, although a great 
deal more can be got out of them if you push them hard. 

There are a number of inhabited spots in this Oasis, but it is very 
unhealthy on account of the stagnant lakes or ponds of water which 
exhale a pernicious miasma, dangerous alike to natives and travellers, as 
it produces a very serious remittent fever, manifesting itself twice a 3''ear, 
in Summer and in Autumn. All those desirous of visiting this place 
should therefore do so either in the Winter or in the Spring, that they may 
escape the danger of this fever, which is very easil}' taken. Some fine 
gardens exist here, the best of which are to be found in the vicinity of 
El-Quasr. All kinds of fruit, such as pomegranates, bananas, oranges, 
apricots, figs, grapes, etc., grow in abundance. A number of hot springs 
also bubble up in this Oasis, the waters of which have a temperature of 
about 1 60° F. Very much finer dates are produced here than in any 
other part of the valley of the Nile. Their date palms yield in far 
greater abundance and the best are called the Kaka. It is from the date 
crop that they derive their principal revenue. 

The city of OxyrrJiynl^hos derives its name from a fish which the 
natives used to worship. The town, to-day, is of very little importance, 
the desert sands having drifted into large sand-dunes that extend all along 



424 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

the edge of tlie cultivated land, and on tlie southern part of the site of the 
old city, are mounds covered with sand, above which, have been erected 
several Sheik's tombs, while upon others we find large quantities of pot- 
tery, bricks, stones, columns, pieces of cornices and very peculiar looking 
altar-like stones, which go to prove the existence of a large city here at 
some time, whose size is demonstrated in the extent of the mounds. 

There are some very interesting caverns to be seen a short distance 
to the northwest of the present town of Behnesa, one of which is decorated 
with a series of columns, but we are unable to explore and investigate 
them, as we would desire, on account of their being filled with water. The 
cit}' of Oxyrrhynkhos was, during the fifth century, a stronghold of the 
Christians, and the town itself was noted for its churches, said to have 
been twelve in number. History informs us that the diocese contained 
ten thousand monks and twelve hundred nuns; its Egyptian name was 
Pa-Maze^ and during the Arab domination it had quite a large population. 

All around Abu Girga are to be found the ruined sites of aucient 
towns and cities, for instance, about three miles south of this place, and 
about a mile and a half from the river, we come to the town of El-Oes, 
the ancient site of Kynopolis — the " City of Dogs." It is here that 
Amubis was -worshipped and all dogs held in great veneration by the 
ancient inhabitants, so much so that to kill one was considered the greatest 
crime which could be committed, and Plutarch tells how a quarrel once 
arose between these two Nomes of Sep and Kynopolis, requiring Roman 
intervention to settle. The citizens of each Nome, as it seems, had killed 
and eaten the sacred gods, or dog and fish, of the other, which act caused such 
bitter strife and ill-feeling that, as I have before stated, the Roman author- 
ity^ had to interfere. Some discussion has arisen as to the proof of the site 
of this city of Kynopolis ; many historians place it upon the East bank, 
at Shekh Fadl, while according to Ptolemy it was situated upon an island 
of the Nile ; but there is no evidence of such an island to-day, although 
Murray says : 

" There is reason to believe that one branch of the Nile had been 
stopped in this spot, which once flowed to the west of El-Qes ; and this 
would accord with the position of Kynopolis on an island, according to 
Ptolemy, and account for the statement of Mukkan that El-Oes was on 
the East bank." At Shekh Fadl there are to be found evidences of two 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 425 

small temples, the site of which is now occupied by a sugar factory, sur- 
rounded by very nice gardens, etc., in fact there are cultivated fields 
on the East bank the entire distance from Shekh Embarak, opposite 
Maghagah, to this place Shekh Fadl. Not far from here is where Father 
Sicard found quite a number of dog mummies, and in examining this 
subject we find the existence of more than one breed of dogs in Egypt in 
those days. There are in addition many other things which will possess 
great interest to the traveller or explorer in this vicinity. 

In the morning we arose to find our boat under wa}^, with just enough 
Avind blowing to keep steerage way upon her ; so we took our toast and 
coffee, lit a good cigar and went up under the awning to watch the sur- 
rounding scenery. As we watched the river bank receding we also noticed 
that the various sand spits were literally alive with all kinds of birds, such 
as the snow white pelican, flamingo, purple Nile geese. Ibis, Heron, plover, 
golden snipe, etc., etc., and saw away up in the azure sky an eagle watch- 
ing its prey, far below him, while the pied kingfishers were plying their 
vocation. Flocks of sheep and many goats were browsing along the shore, 
while buffaloes and camels were to be seen under the care of some fella- 
heen, who was driving them along the path by the river, and all the time 
the songs of our sailors rang out upon the morning air in one continuous 
stream, like the flowing waters of the river itself, as they never seemed to 
tire of singing, and to tell the truth we had grown so accustomed to it we 
were beginning to like it, for it served to break the monotony of our voyage. 

The gong rang out, and we went down the narrow steps to partake of 
an excellent meal, after which we came on deck again to see our sailors 
tracking along the tow-path, with their scanty costumes flapping as they 
went bobbing along, harnessed on to the tow-line, and the sound of their 
everlasting songs ringing out in unison to tramping footsteps. As we 
watched them the Avind sprang up again, the ropes were dropped, they 
twisted their clothes around their heads, plunged into the river, clambered 
on board, loosed the great big sails, and once more we went careening 
along the sparkling waters up towards Kolosana, which is quite a large 
village on the west bank of the river, sixty-four miles from Beni Suef, 
and one hundred and thirty-six miles from Cairo. 

It lies close to the river and presents quite a picturesque appearance 
from here, with its very fine-looking palm groves and fertile fields. 



426 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

There is both post and telegraph ofiEces here, as well as a railway- 
station. The town is located on high mounds, and the bank of the river 
at this place is effected by the wash of its waters. 

On the opposite side of the Nile, on its east bank, is the village of 
Surariya, and jnst beyond it are the ruins of some very ancient towns, 
as well as the remains of a very ancient temple in a rather out-of-the-way 
place among the rocks, which belonged to the nineteenth dynasty. The 
representations upon the walls show that the triad of Sebek, Hathor and 
Horus were worshipped here. Rameses III, Horus and the god Sebek, 
with the head of a crocodile, are plainly to be seen upon the walls. 
The hills recede close to this place, falling off to the southeast and form- 
ing the northern side of the Wady ed-Der. To the northwest of its 
mouth and about ten minutes' walk from the river are some very fine 
limestone quarries, wherein we found a painted grotto temple that had 
been dedicated to Hathor, . and inscribed upon it were the names of 
Rameses II (Mer-en-Ptah), and Seti II. 

Just beyond Kolosana we passed two large islands, and saw the cars 
go rushing by on their way south. The wind began to die out and our 
great sails began to flap idly in the calm of the evening, when our reis 
Abdallah again sheered the boat under the bank, and we tied up for the 
night a short distance north of the village of Samallut. It has a railway 
station with post and telegraph offices, and lies about half a mile from the 
river and about five miles south of Kolosana. This is quite a large 
town, conspicuous for a tall and graceful minaret rising from amidst a 
very fine grove of palm trees. The town is surrounded by fields of 
cane, clover, beans, etc., and there are some very good sugar factories 
located here. A little farther on, to the south, and on the east bank, are 
the lofty and precipitous cliffs oi Gcbcl ct-Ter, "Bird Mountain." Taking 
my gun and Salame along with me to carry the birds, we strolled down 
the river towards Kolosana, while Hassan took Musa along with him to 
make some purchases of butter, eggs, etc., at Samallut, to replenish our 
larder, while our sailors indr:lged themselves, by gathering in a circle in 
the usual way, to sing their customary songs. Salame and I soon had 
plenty of sport, for he enjoyed the retrieving process about as much I did 
knocking the birds over. In a very little while we found that we had 
bagged a lot of quail, over a dozen fine ducks, a few grouse and one very 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. -i^T 

large snow-white pelican that I desired for a specimen. We then returned 
to the boat in time for my bath, and I dressed just as the gong rang out 
for dinner. After dinner we went on deck, threw ourselves into our nice 
cosy chairs under the awning, lit our cigars and watched the glorious 
sunset and the play of colors upon the high and lofty cliffs of Gebel 
et-Ter. 

It would be simply impossible to express in words the gorgeous 
coloring, the play of lights and shades, the deep flush of crimson, pink, 
and gold, with the sweet, indescribable after-glow of a Nile sunset. I 
have watched the setting sun in many climes and countries, but never 
have I seen such glorious, inexpressible colorings of a sunset sky as I 
have witnessed in this wondrous valley of the Nile. 

I conscientiously believe that to properly understand the history of 
this country one should begin in the Delta of the Nile and make a care- 
ful examination of the various ruins of tombs, temples, monuments, etc., 
as they go up the Nile, as by this means only will they be enabled to see 
some of the most ancient specimens of Egyptian architecture belonging 
to many cities which were in the height of their glory long centuries 
before Romulus and Remus laid the foundation of Rome. All who come 
into this valley to acquire a knowledge of Egyptian Architecture, etc., 
should, therefore, begin their study while coming up through Gizeh, 
Sakkarah, Medum, The Faj'um, Beni Hassan, Tel el Amarna, Karnak 
and Luxor to the Island of Philse. In this way each and all will be able 
to trace the peculiar style of architecture from the earliest Pharaonic age 
down to the decline of the Roman domination. 

Again, before going into the " Land of Egypt," one should have 
some knowledge of the history of the country, its people, their manners 
and customs, by reason of which they would enjoy their journeyings 
more and would come back far better pleased and with 'a clearer under- 
standing of what they had seen. 

Under an awning, especially fitted up for our comfort and enjoy- 
ment, we passed many pleasant evenings. We had nice cosy, comfortable 
chairs, tables, rugs, cushions, etc., with a gun-rack quite convenient for 
our use, as we amused ourselves very often with our rifles and shot guns. 
We sat and talked on various subjects until we found ourselves yawning, 
when we retired to sleep. The loud yallough of Hassan to the crew 



428 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

awakened me and I found the sun flashing its light above the eastern 
mountains, and on reaching the deck found our boat was under way, with 
a light air astir, heading for the tall cliffs of Gebel et-Ter. It does not 
take long to reach the landing place on the north side of this mountain, 
upon whose flat top is located a Coptic convent. This place is also called 
Dcr cl-Adi-a^ and by many others Der ct-Bakara^ because in the days 
gone by travellers desiring to visit the convent were hoisted up by means 
of a pulley, but now they land to the north of the mountain and walk up 
steep rocky steps, which form a sort of path to the summit. 

But ver}^ little is to be seen when the summit is reached, except 
the magnificent view of the surrounding country. The village is walled 
in and contains a number of squalid-looking houses, occupied by monks 
and laymen, with their wives and children. The monks claim to be 
shoemakers ; but it seemed to me their principal occupation was that of 
begging, for no sooner does a boat appear in sight than they rush down 
to the river and swim off to it, actually fighting their way on board, and 
beg most lustily for alms, in many instances without a particle of 
clothing to hide their nakedness, and if the wind is scant they hang 
around and pester the life out of 3'ou. If the}' are driven off one side of 
the boat they will very soon appear on the other and in this way will 
cause you considerable annoyance, so the best thing to do is to give them 
baksheesh and let them go at their own "sweet will." 

The convent, or church, is a ver}' peculiar one, as it is partly under- 
ground, with the choir and sanctuary cut out of the solid rock. It is 
well worth a visit. There is a peculiar legend attached to this place. 
The Arabs believe that all kinds of birds flock to this mountain, once a 
year, in order to arrange the affairs of the whole feathered creation. 

We came down to our boat and got rid of the jostling mendicant 
crowd, by going on board, after which our sailors punted her off into the 
stream, the sails were loosed and once more we were sailing along on our 
journey south. Our dragoman told us that he was glad we had passed 
this place in safety, for the last time he was sailing by this mountain a 
very sudden gust of Avind turned the boat upon her beam-end. They 
were extremely fortunate, however, as not a life had been lost on account 
of the accident, they having righted her again and continued their 
voyage, minus some of their guns, etc., that were on the vipper deck, and 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 429 

he said from that time he was alwa3^s on the look-out for squalls while 
passing that mountain. 

About five or six miles to the south of this convent are the site and 
ruins of Tehna, with its very large mounds, located about three-fourths 
of a mile from the river, under the rocky cliffs of the Eastern mountains, 
which have dwindled down into hills. A trip to this place will prove of 
more than passing interest to the traveller, because he will be enabled to 
see side by side, as it were, both the tombs of the earliest Pharaonic age 
and those that belonged to the very latest period of rock tombs of the 
Lagadie. 

These tombs are built after the style of those at Memphis and con- 
sist of three distinct parts : ist. The entrance chamber or chambers. 
2nd. A very deep shaft. 3rd. The sepulchral vault, wherein is placed 
the sarcophagus for the mummy alone. The entrances to the different 
tombs vary in construction, as manj^ of them are decorated with columns, 
while a great number are without them ; but one thing they nearly all 
have in common, which is that the walls are all adorned with paintings 
taken from the daily life of the deceased and his family. It is just from 
such things as these that we have been enabled to study the manners 
and customs of these ancient people. The quarries are also very inter- 
esting places to visit, in fact there are many things in this vicinity which 
will repay one for the time and trouble expended in visiting them. 

After returning from these jaunts we appreciated our comfortable 
quarters on board our floating home, as we were invariably tired and weary; 
but the comfort of a cooling bath and a good rest, after our long rambling 
tramp, added zest to our appetite for dinner, and fitted us to spend the 
evening on deck under the glittering stars, talking of these most extraor- 
dinary relics of ancient Egyptian splendor, constituting an ample recom- 
pense for the additional trifling expense. As there was no wind we tied 
up for the night, and long after the others had retired I sat up writing to 
friends at home and arranging my notes of the day for future use. I 
slept remarkably well and did not awake until Salame told me that the 
first gong had sounded for breakfast and was surprised on looking out 
my cabin window to see our boat crawling along, drawn by our sailors on 
the tow path, and to hear the same old inimitable refrain echoing o'er the 
waters, so, with rowing and punting we managed to reach Minia. 



430 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

It is a very pretty and prosperous town one hundred and fifty-three 
miles from Cairo, very nicely located on the west bank of the river. It 
contains post and telegraph offices and a railway station. Minia is quite 
an important town, having a population of over sixteen thousand inhabi- 
tants, with two fairly good hotels and a number of stores, where one can 
purchase nearly all they may need, from different varieties of Manches- 
ter goods, to jams, jellies, patent medicines, etc., etc. A market was held 
here every Monday, and as we visited this place Saturday we agreed to 
remain over so that Hassan could buy the necessaries for our journey 
South. It was here in Minia that the first sugar factory was established 
in the " Land of Egypt," which is there to-day, not as it used to be, but 
very much enlarged and improved, with all the latest modern machinery. 
The inhabitants of this place are not very prepossessing in their appear- 
ance or their manners, and are generally very dirty, many of them 
swarming with vermin. Opthalmia and other diseases are quite preva- 
lent among both sexes. 

In many places throughout this country, one out of a score of people 
you meet, are either totally blind or partially so. I will venture to say 
that you may travel the wide world over and never in all your wander- 
ings find so many one-eyed people as j-ou will in the " Land of Egypt." 
The streets are extremely narrow, and very dusty, Avith no sidewalks, 
being usually filled with an ill-smelling lot of sullen, unfriendly, thieving 
people, both men and women. 

We spent our Sunday on board the boat, arranging our notes, until 
the evening, when I went on shore and strolled off down the river, 
accompanied by Salame. On turning back toward our floating home we 
met a gentleman who was, like ourselves, out for an evening walk. I 
entered into conversation with him and found that he was retiirning to 
his home in England, after having spent a number of years in India. I 
invited him to dine with us, which invitation he most courteousl}^ accepted, 
and we spent the rest of the evening and far into the night talking of 
the " Land of the Vedas," Egypt and Ancient Masonry, of which I shall 
speak in the next chapter. The next morning we arose early and went on 
shore to visit the bazar and market-place. Hasson bought what he needed 
and I purchased a good supply of candles and magnesium wire to be used 
during our explorations among the tombs and temples farther South. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 431 

Everything in the nature of vegetables and fruits, as well as 
chickens, ducks, geese, turkeys, etc., were very cheap. Hassan bought a 
very fine sheep for our crew for $4.00, chickens sold for ten cents each, 
ducks the same, fine live geese from thirty-five cents to half a dollar, 
pigeons sold for twenty-five cents a dozen, while very large and excellent 
turkeys sold for seventy-five cents each. What a surging, dirty, clamor- 
ing crowd they were, yelling and shrieking at the top of their voices, 
bargaining one with the other for their ware. The burning sun during 
the time we were there was beating down upon us its fiery rays, and the 
dust, rising in smothering clouds, from the incessant tramping of feet 
made the air suffocating, and I was glad to get away from the place to 
enjoy myself with a good cigar on board the boat, watch the people 
walking on shore and the various boats and steamers upon the river. 

Minia is a very bus}^ place during the cane harvest, when the sugar 
factories are running. This is the proper time to visit them, to witness 
the process of extracting the j nice, boiling, etc., which enters largely into 
the production of sugar. I sat here under the awning smoking and 
watching the people pass and repass, and the old fellow who keeps guard 
at the gate of the Khedive's summer palace, and the boats upon the river, 
until the gong rang for dinner. As there was no wind we concluded to 
remain at this place over night, on account of which the captain and crew 
had a grand fastasia, inviting a great many people from the other 
boats around us. As soon as our men began to beat their drums and 
tambourines the river bank became crowded with people^ listening to both 
the vocal and instrumental music, not only of our own crew but that of 
their friends as well. They blew their pipes and beat their tambourines 
and drums, singing and dancing and performing various comic and 
grotesque antics, in fact, having one of the greatest times with this 
fantasia, burning fire works, etc., that we had ever witnessed. They kept 
it up for I do not know how long, as I went to bed and slept quietly all 
through the night. 

Shortly after breakfast a light air sprang up that was favorable for 
us, so our sails were loosed, the boat punted off into the stream, when 
she soon began to gather headway, and off we go once more to the 
sounding songs of our sailors and the loud benedictions of the friends of 
our crew. We passed the thriving little town of Suadi, on the East bank, 



432 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

with its large sugar plantations ; but we did not stop to examine either 
the mounds or the ruins of the town, said to be located there, but kept 
on, sailing by a rather large island, and as the wind began to freshen we 
soon came up to Ncslat ez-Zawiya, a small village, around which there 
are many verj' interesting things to be seen. All the way from Suadi to 
Tel el-Amarna one can find ruins of tombs and temples, as well as very 
extensive quarries of the Roman period ; but we did not stop to examine 
any, as we are very anxious to get to the tombs of Beni Hassan and 
explore them. About five miles from Minia we arrive at and pass 
Zawiyet el-Mayyitin at which place is located the modern cemetery of 
Minia. 

In viewing their method of disposing of the dead to-day, and the 
ferrying of the bodies across the river, accompanied by the ululations of 
the women, will recall to the observer the same peculiar custom of the 
ancient Egyptians during the Golden Age of Egypt. Three times a 
3'ear, in certain months, somewhere about the full of the moon, these 
people of Minia go over to their dead and make their offerings to them of 
dates, palm branches, etc. A short distance from here to the South, are 
the celebrated "Red mounds," a most interesting place to visit on account 
of the early tombs that were discovered here. It used to be in the days of 
the twelfth dynasty, possibly earlier, a manufactory of pottery and ala- 
baster vases, and no doubt many beautiful specimens of the handiwork of 
these people, have been recovered from the tombs and temples in the 
different parts of Egypt, which are to be seen to-day, in the various 
museums throughout the world. A great number are still, doubtless, 
lying undiscovered beneath the shrouding sands of the desert. The 
ancient name of this place was Hebu^ and it belonged to the Nome of 
Mah^ in Upper Egypt. 

Beni Hassan was at length reached, and we could see with our glasses 
the tombs and grottos that have been hollowed out in the side of the 
mountain. We had been warned by travellers and friends to be careful 
and have a good watch set both night and da}^ while stopping in this 
place, for it is noted as being one of the worst places for thieves to be 
found on the Nile. The villages have been the rendezvous for thieves for 
many long years ; in fact, the old village was destroyed by order of 
Ibrahim Pasha, on account of the disreputable character of the inhabi- 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 433 

tants ; but they have returned again and rebuilt their hovels, and now the 
onl}' thing to do is to keep a strict watch for them, both day and night. 
We gave our men extra baksheesh to be doubly careful during our stay. 
The tombs are located two miles from where we landed, so we hired don- 
keys, took candles and magnesium wire along, that we might examine their 
interior parts. We started upon our way, through palm groves and sand 
dunes, toward the mountains, our donkey boys making directly for one 
especial tomb, and that one is decorated with Doric columns. One of the 
first things we carefully examined was the columns at the entrance of 
this tomb, which most assuredly astonished us, as they were purely and 
simpl}' Doric. After very careful examination, both of the outer and 
interior columns, we most certainly agreed with many other authorities 
that the Doric Order must have originated in Egypt, and that here in 
this very tomb were evidences of this fact. Champollin calls them Proto 
Doric^ or Pre Doric Cobimns. And Lepsius bears out this assertion in 
his account of these remarkable columns. 

The entrance to the first tombs is noted for its two beautiful octag- 
onal columns, and in the inside chamber four sixteen-edged, fluted 
columns (referred to above) supporting three very fine painted arches. 
At the end of this chamber is a recess containing the dilapidated statues 
of the deceased and his two wives. He was named Ameneviha^ or Afiieni^ 
after a king of the eleventh dynasty. In the inscription which is upon 
both sides of the doorway, or entrance to the chamber, is an historical 
account of himself telling us that he was a General of infantry under 
Usertesen the First and Governor of the Nome of Sah. The paintings 
in this tomb are very interesting ; but unfortunately they are not as 
bright and fresh as when T first saw them some years ago, but still thej' 
are well worthy a careful study. The next tomb that we visited was that 
of Khnem-Hetep, or Noum-Hotep, who was a priest of Horns and 
Anubis. 

The pictures in this tomb, as I have said, are deserving of careful 
study, because, from such paintings only are we able to come to an 
understanding of the manners and customs of the people living in the 
Golden Age of Egyptian history ; for here, like in the tomb of Tih, we 
may see carpenters, boatbuilders, weavers, potters, fullers, bakers, sculp- 
tors and others working at their trades, while other pictures represent 
28 



434 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

scenes of ploughing, sowing, reaping, harvesting, threshing and storing 
the grain, etc. Another represents a Nile boat taking the mummy of the 
deceased to Abydos (the grave of Osiris). There are fishing and hunting 
scenes, etc., etc., all of which are extremely instructive. 

This tomb contains a very interesting painting upon the North wall, 
representing the immigration of some Semetic tribe, for they all have 
very prominent aquiline noses and pointed black beards which plainly 
denotes their nationality. They are clothed differently from the Egyp- 
tians around them, and are evidently the advance guard of a new race 
into Egypt. It is the most ancient painting ever discovered, showing the 
immigration of an Asiatic race which aftervvard played such an important 
part in the government of this country. 

We also visited Spcos Artemidos^ a grotto, very much like those of 
Beni Hassan ; it is called by the Arabs Stable Antar. This tomb was 
founded by Hatasu, or Thothmes III, of the eighteenth d3masty. We 
did not remain very long at this tomb, as it was getting on towards sun- 
down, and we were among a very hard class of people, so we mounted our 
little donkeys and rode back to our floating home ; but before we reached 
the river I bought a few scarabs, a couple of mummied cats which bore 
their ear-marks in the smell, for although it must have been thirty cen- 
turies since they made night hideous with their yowlings, the odor of cat 
was plainly distinguished when handling them. 

When we arrived at the river and our boat, the wind was blowing fair, 
so just as soon as we stepped on board the sails were loosed and off we 
went once again, still toward the South. We had time enough to take 
our bath and smoke a cigar when the gong rang out for dinner and our 
craft was bowling along before a good stiff breeze which would soon put 
us into Roda, nine miles from Beni Hassan. When we came on deck 
again the sun had set, the stars were out in all their resplendent glory, 
the wind was fair and our reis pointed out the lights of Roda, which we 
soon reached. The sails furled and our boat made fast to the bank of the 
river we again took seats under the awning, where, before we had finished 
our cigars, the crew had formed their circle and the pipe and drums rang 
out with the fluttering tambourines. I did not stop up to listen to their 
songs, but went down to sleep, as I was tired and weary from my ramb- 
lings amidst the tombs or grottos of Beni Hassan. 



ilncfifable I3cgrccs-Cfjougfjts on lEcclesiastcs 



435 



RcTncmber now thy Creator in the days of thy youth, while 
the evil days ccn;c not, nor the years draw ntgh, when thou sbalt 
say, I have no pleasure in them. 

— ECCLESIASTES 12 I 1. 



436 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 431 



CHAPTER XIX. 

INEFFABLE DEGREES— THOUGHTS ON ECCLESIASTES-I. N. R. f. 



(5The 



HE Symbolic degrees are those conferred in the Blue Lodge and 
ej|_ known as: ist, The Entered Apprentice; 2nd, The Fellowcraft, 
and 3rd, The Master Mason. These degrees are recognized throughout 
the world universal as the most ancient. All those who have taken them 
have the pre-requisite of being elected to the higher degrees of the York 
Rite, or to be inducted into the sublime and Ineffable degrees conferred 
in our own beloved Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite Bodies of both 
the Northern or Southern Jurisdictions. That is, providing the applicant 
is in good and regular standing, in some regularly constituted Lodge, 
working under a Charter or warrant from some Grand Lodge in the 
United States of America, or in good and regular standing in any Foreign 
Lodge that is recognized by the Grand Lodges of the United States of 
America. Then, if the applicant is found worthy and well qualified he 
will, most assuredl}^, be elected to receive those sublimely beautiful 
degrees from the 4th to the 14th inclusive, which are called Ineffable, in 
order to distinguish them from the Symbolic degrees of the Blue Lodge. 

These degrees are known as 4° Secret Master^ 5° Perfect Master, 
6° Inthnate Secretary^ 7° Provost and Judge ^ 8° Intendent of the Building, 
9° Elu of the Nine, 10° Elu of the Fifteen, 11° Flu of the Twelve, 
12° Master Architect, 13° Royal Arch of Solomon, 14° Grand Elect or 
Perfect Elu. I have shown, in a previous chapter, that the first three 
degrees of Blue Masonry are based upon the ancient Astronomical Alle- 
gories of the Egyptians, whose Astronomical ideas and solar symbols are 
intimately woven into the very hea:t of our glorious Fraternity. The 
whole of which will be very readily understood and comprehended by the 
Masonic student who has risen to the Sublime heights of the Ineifable 
degrees of our own beloved Scottish Rite Masonry. 

They are indescribably grand, sublimely beautiful and truly Inef- 
fable. They can only be acquired, thoroughly appreciated and learned 



438 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

by all those who pass from the square to the compasses whose swinging 
leg circumscribes every moral virtue. They will then be enabled to 
thoroughly understand the true value of Secrecy, Obedience and Fidelity, 
and in passing from one to the other our Aspirant will soon realize that 
there is a vast difference between the York and Scottish Rite of Masonry. 

He will realize that just as soon as he steps across the very 
threshold of Scottish Masonry, on his way to the higher degrees in our 
Lodge of Perfection, that he is entering upon a rich field of intellectual 
research so vast and so grand that our Neophyte will scarcel}^ realize the 
sublimity and grandeur of its teachings. At first he will be so blinded, 
as it were, by the refulgent glory, that he will but dimly sense in dark- 
ness visible the sublime ceremonies, and from out their profound depths he 
will in Silence begin to realize that he carries the light of all Knowledge 
within his own heart ; aye, within his own grasp, and will come to an 
understanding that, in order to acquire knowledge, we must look within 
for the Light of Truth and Wisdom. 

Let me state right here, that I earnestly desire my readers to know 
that " The Key to each degree is the Aspirant himself," and we must 
ever remember that " it is not the fear of God which is the beginning of 
Wisdom, but the Knowledge of Self which is Wisdom itself." 

We gain knowledge and information in reading the thoughts of 
others ; but we only attain Wisdom or become Wise when we 7'ead ojir 
oivn thoughts, or Think for onrselves. By the Light of Truth and 
Wisdom we ponder upon Death, and realize tliat there is no deatli, and 
that there is no inorganic matter ; that all molecular forms are pulsing 
with life, and so far as this physical body of man is concerned, the old 
shard, or shell, the Personality at death passes away never to appear 
again in that form. Every atom and molecule that went to build it, disin- 
tegrates and becomes the dust of the earth once again, while the Individu- 
ality lives, the immortal part of man never dies, but endures forever. 
This separation of the Personality and the Individuality is most beauti- 
fully described by Sir Edwin Arnold, as : 

■ ' ' Faithful friends ! It lies I know, 
Pale and white, and cold as snow ; 
And ye say, ' Abdallah's dead ! ' 
Weeping at the feet and head. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 439 

"I can see your falling tears, 
I can hear your sighs and prayers ; 
Yet I smile and whisper this — 
I am not the thing you kiss ; 
Cease your tears and let it lie. 
It was mine — it is not I.' 

"Sweet friends! What the women lave 
For its last bed in the grave, 
Is a hut which I am quitting, 
Is a garment no more iitting, 
Is a cage from which at last 
Like a hawk, my soul has passed. 



"What ye lift upon the bier 
Is not worth a wistful tear ; 
'Tis an empty seashell — one 
Out of which the pearl is gone ; 
The shell is broken — it lies there 
The pearl, the all, the soul is here. 

" Now the long, long wonder ends ; 
Yet ye weep, my erring friends, 
While the one whom 5'e call dead 
In unbroken bliss instead, 
Lives and loves you — lost, 'tis true, 
For the light as shines for j'ou ; 
But in the light ye can not see 
Of undisturbed felicity — 
Lives a life that never dies." 



What we call Death comes to every one, it meets us everywhere ; is 
ever by our side, and yet we should not fear it, for it is that which opens for 
us the portals to a Life Eternal. We must ever remember that it is our 
bounden duty to live so as to become Perfect Masters in very deed, and 
carefully follow the teachings that are embodied in our ineffable degrees 
b}^ doing unto others ivhaicver you would Justly icn's/i that they should do 
unto you ; then will Wisdom, Power and Benevolence lead your footsteps 
on to higher planes where peace and concord reign supreme. 

Be zealous in the Cause, Faithful to yourself and Brother, Benevo- 
lent and Charitable to the needy, ever striving to be the Peace-Maker, and 



440 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

you will be most assuredly recompensed in attaining a just reward — Per- 
fection. Thus will you be qualified to do good and instruct your Brother 
in all of these truly ineffable degrees of our beloved Scottish Rite of 
Masonry. 

Through all your life, in your dealings with your fellow-man, when- 
ever placed in a position to do so, a/zcavs dispense ivipariial justice to all. 
For it hath been written : " With what judgment ye judge., ye shall bejjidged; 
and with what measure ye mete., it shall be measured to you again?'' Causes 
that are sown by every individual, each moment and every hour, produce 
their effects, and Justice Rules the World. 

The mighty wheel of Karmic Law brings to every man the Karmic 
effects of his every act ; aye, his every thought ! Our beloved Rite teaches 
us that we live in a world of our own making, or creating, and that all 
the thoughts generated in our brain go forth from it with a potenc}^ for 
good or evil. As they pass on in their mission, through the universe, they 
come in contact with others, for like attracts like, and they will receive 
from them some subtle essence, returning to the source from which they 
emanated far more heavily charged with powers for Good or Evil, and we 
shall reap the. effects in bitterness of heart, or inexpressible j 03' and hap- 
piness, as the case may be. 

We cannot, by any possible means, escape from ourselves, yb/'c/^rfzw? 
Thoughts are our ozvn Judge., that is Unerring, Precise and True. Event- 
ually these very judgments will accumulate around us until we shall 
finally stand fully revealed before ourselves and our Brothers as we act- 
ually are — Good and True, or False and Fores\vorn. 

If we will onlji- pause to consider, we shall realize how unqualified 
we are to judge of the actions of our fellow-men, and consequently should 
not, under any circumstances try to do so ; as in the first place we have 
not the ability nor the necessary means to j udge au}^ one ; and for the 
best of all reasons, we have not the three great requisites of a Judge, like 
the Supreme Architect of the Universe, Ojinipresence, Omnipotence 
AND Omniscience. We should most assuredly thoroughly understand 
that each and every one of us is capable only of judging of but one person, 
and that one is ourself—a.ndi right there our j udgment should cease. 

We should also know that Judging and Discriminating are two 
different things and if we may not Judge we can discriminate. For 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 441 

instance, in recognizing a fault in our Brother we should not judge him 
for it ; but rather sympathize with him in his inability to rise above it 
therefore, it is our duty to give him generous sympathy, and not to be 
harsh with him, because he is entangled in the meshes of an irresistible 
force which compels him to act in the manner that he does. Each and 
every one of us possess those finer senses by which we are enabled to 
distinguish an hypocritical foe from a true friend, and by the develop- 
ment of which we can readil}^ tell the true from the false, and develop a 
force that ^vill give us help, in our every day life, among our Brothers by 
the wayside. There are a great many deeds performed by many men, 
deeds that we execrate ; yet, if we ourselves were placed under the same 
conditions, and compelled by similar forces, we would doubtless act in the 
self-same way. Therefore Jzidge not, but if you are compelled or called 
upon to do so " decide justly and impartially, and do justice to all men." 
Every Brother who has attained to the honor of " Intendent of the 
Building " should work most earnestly and faithfully for the benefit of 
our glorious Scottish Rite in particular, and Masonry in general, making 
Charity and Benevolence his watchwords, and practicing these virtues 
every hour and every day of his life. It will be his especial Duty to 
make himself thoroughly familiar with the esoteric teachings of Masonry 
and Masonic Jurisprudence, so that he will not be a mere drone among 
the zealous workers of this degree ; but advance along the Masonic road 
which will ultimately lead him to those of Perfection, so that he may be 
enabled to explore the profound depths of Philosophy that lie beneath 
the surface of each and every one of our supremely beaiitiful Ineffable 
Degrees. In his endeavors to discover the true meaning of the Sym- 
bology, that permeates each and every one, he will most assuredly 
discover that they were intended to reveal far more than the symbol 
itself, for, as previously stated, Symbols were made to' conceal, and not 
to reveal, in the generally accepted meaning of that word. It will only 
be, therefore, after long and earnest study, and profound meditation, that 
he will come to an understanding of their Iriie significance. In the 
twinkling of an eye their meaning will finally flash across his brain and 
illuminate his mind, revealing to him the fact that Masonry is devoted to 
all Truth, not alone to Science and Philosophy, but more especially and 
particularly to Political and Religious Truths as well. 



442 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Many of our degrees were created in order to reward those Elus 
who had proved their worthiness to our glorious Fraternity by their 
Obedience, Fidelitj^ and Devotion ; not to the Fraternity only, but to the 
cause of suffering Humanity, the destruction of Ignorance, and the 
Liberty of the People. It is the Duty of every Brother to WORK, 
earnestly and untiringly, in the interest of his fellow man, his country, 
the destruction of Tyranny and Fanatacism and to champion the Rights 
of the People against Intolerance, Bigotry and Persecution. Masonry 
sits apart from all plots and conspiracies, and does not countenance 
either I/icentiousness or Anarchy ; but will always be a power for Liberty 
and Justice, believing that every man has the right to worship God 
according to the dictates of his own conscience ; that no man or body of 
men, have a right to condemn another's faith or belief because it does not 
agree or conform to their own conception of Right or Wrong. All really 
good and true men, as well as Masons, are alike in their ideas respecting 
all forms of worship, as they tolerate all opinions, establishing a fellow- 
ship with all worth}'- men, without distinction to race, creed, cast, or color. 
True Masons are charitable to the faults of others, self-sacrificing to all 
men, speakjng and acting well toward others, and if, by any means, they 
cannot speak a good word in praise of their fellowman and Brother, they 
prefer to remain silent, rather than say anything evil of any one. 

Masonry is not a Religion, and he who would make it such falsifies 
its claims ; as the Hindu, Bramin, Parsee, Jew or Christian can each, one 
and all, become members of our beloved Fraternity, provided they are 
found worthy and well qualified. Members of all denominations are to 
be found in all our Lodges, Chapters, Councils and Consistories through- 
out the world universal, and be he either Jew, Gentile, Hindu, Brahmin or 
Moslem, his belief will be respected by each member of our most glorious 
Fraternity. 

Of course many pass through our portals, who are not worthy, and 
we are compelled to admit that there are black sheep within our^ fold, but 
by the Eternal God, Masonry never painted them black, for they were 
black at heart long before their petition was presented for admission 
into our beloved Fraternity. 

In entering the fold of Masonry the first promise that is made by 
our aspirant is that " he will learn to subdue his passions and improve 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 443 

himself in Masonry," and this pledge must be given before our aspiring 
candidate can advance one step along the path which leads to LiGHT AND 
Truth. 

As herein before stated, a man by simply joining a Masonic Lodge, 
does not at once become a good or better man. Its sublime teachings 
point out the path he should follow in order to perfect himself in 
Masonry, and it lies entirely with himself, whether or not, he will ever 
learn to subdue his passions. 

In all our Institutions Black Sheep crawl in among us by some 
means or other; certain it is they get there, just as in our Churches of 
all denominations. We find some of the Clergy themselves, black- 
hearted, entirely unworthy the position the}^ occupy. For my part I am 
truly sorry for this deplorable condition of things, and simply point out 
the fact of its being so. The only way that I can see to remedy this evil, 
is, for the examining committees to be more careful in searching for the 
True character of the applicants, and not depend upon their reputation, 
for it is not always safe to depend upon the reputation of any one, for 
this reason a man may have a good reputation and be apparently a grand 
good man, a jolly, jovial companion ; but at heart he may be a most 
damnable, black-hearted scoundrel. 

In conclusion let me say this : Do not look at the fiiiaticial condition 
of your treasnry^ bnt rather to the character of the Applicants themselves 
for the npbuildiug of our beloved Fraternity. 

What right has any man, or body of men, to persecute and condemn 
another because he does not, and can not, believe as others command him 
to do ? There are no two men constituted alike, neither are there two 
things exactly alike in the universe ; consequently no man should be 
censured or praised because he believes that Christ has come ; neither 
should we blame our fellow man because he believes that HE IS YET TO 
COME ; or find fault with any man if he believes that he never will come ; 
but, firmly believing that Christ, or the Christ principle, dwells in the 
heart of every man, and that every individual must be his own Saviour 
to work out his own redemption. 

My dear Brothers and kind friends, if the so-called Light of the 
" New Dispensation " is not visible to either him or them, assuredly it is 
not your fault, nor their misfortune. Truth to one may not be Truth to 



444 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

another, aud what may appear perfectly consistent to me, may seem to be 
the height of absurdity to yon and others ; but your thinking so does not 
make it so. Consequently we j/i/ts/ certainly realize at some time, that it 
is one of the greatest of crimes for any man or body of men to condemn 
and punish others, simply because they do not believe as they do. 

The Hindu, Brahmin, Jew or Moslem, has just as much right to 
condemn, persecute and punish us, as we have to revile and persecute 
them. There is no particular merit in a man being a Jew, Gentile, 
Mohammedan or Hindu. 

No matter what his faith may be, it is dependent in a great measure, 
upon his birth-place, and to the Mother "who bore him, for he drinks in 
with his Mother's milk the faith and belief which belongs to her. We 
shall find that these teachings are, in many instances, the most lasting, 
because he is so constituted as to need some system of worship, concrete 
and tangible, upon which to focus his hopes and aspirations, consequently 
he follows the form of worship, whose basic principles and rules, he 
learned at his Mother's knee. 

It is self-evident that the country wherein we are born, and the 
religious belief of the Mother, are evidently mighty factors in the produc- 
tion of a belief in one thing and disbelief in another. All that Masonry 
demands of her applicants is a belief in the One Great God — 77/*? 
Supreme Architect of the Universe^ who holds the Solar System within the 
hollow of his hand. 

As Grand Master Architects, we are, or should be, thoroughly 
familiar with the various instruments belonging to this most beautiful 
degree, because it is actually necessary for the Aspirant to thoroughly 
understand everything pertaining to one degree, before entering upon 
another. Every sign and every symbol should be thoroughl}^ compre- 
hended by our aspiring Brothers, they should earnestly study and care- 
fully examine each and every one, in order to comprehend their trite 
meaning, for the most elementary symbol will make some demand upon 
their intelligence and attention, therefore a most profound study will be 
required before they will understand the beautful lessons which they 
teach. Then will they increase their knowledge, be in a far better con- 
dition to discharge the duties alloted to them, and better able to instruct 
other Brethren in need of more Light. It is far better to have Wisdom 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 445 

than riches, for the Wise are glad of heart always, while riches will take 
to itself wings and fly to the four corners of the earth. " Wisdom will 
remain with thee, and bring thee glory and honor when thou shalt, by 
earnest study and profound meditation, embrace her and hold her in 
thine arms ; aj'e, within thine heart ; then will she abide with thee and 
crown thee with glory that shall never die ; for the words and deeds of 
the truly Wise will live for ever." 

Life and Time are but a point within a circle, the centre of Eternity, 
and that point in the centre is a fitting emblem of the Deity, like the 
Pole star in the starry vault above : 

Self-centered in the boundless blue, 

Calm dweller of the vast unknown ; 
For ever tender, strong, and true. 

Serenely from her distant throne, 
He gazes down the voiceless deep, 
While worlds are drifting at his feet, 
And mighty constellations sweep 
'Round him like an endless fleet. 
The Northern I^ights across him flame, 

The glorj- of their dancing spheres ; 
The morning star beneath him sing. 

The chorus of creation's years. 
And while systems sink and rise, 

And planets to each other nod. 
The light streams from his tranquil eye, 

As steadfast as the Love of God. 
— (Reynolds, of Lebanon Lodge, Tacoma, Washington.) 

When the Sun has set in the golden West, and the evening star 
rises in the East, then will shine resplendent in the starry vault above 
the glorious Pole star which guides the Mason o'er the stormy seas of 
Time, and the Mariner o'er the trackless waste of waters, as true as the 
Word of God Himself. 

The various degrees of Architecture are emblematical to us of the 
five different divisions of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of 
Masonry : 

T/ze Tuscan — of the three Blue Degrees or the Primitive Masonry. 



446 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

The Doric — of the Ineffable Degrees, from the 4th to the 14th 
inclusive. 

The loinc — of the 15th and 16th, or the Council Degrees. 

The Cor-intliian — of the 17th and iSth, or the Chapter Degrees. 

The Composite — of the High Degrees from the 19th to the 3 2d 
inclusive. 

We now pass from the working tools of the Architect and Geometri- 
cian. The trestle board, with all of its geometrical problems, we leave 
behind us and advance towards a profound Philosophy, and every degree 
we now receive is a step in that direction. - Therefore, we now devote our 
time to researches among the ruins of ancient Temples, and to the history 
concerning them, wherein was discovered the Luminous Pedestal, Cubical 
stone, and the Ineffable long-lost Word, belonging to the Grand Elect 
and Perfect Mason. 

The Luminous Pedestal, emblem of the physical body of man, is 
lighted up from within by the Light of Reason that permeates the 
heart of every man, and by which he turns the pages of the Book of 
NatiLve^ and xevels in the sublime and profound Truths revealed to him, 
through the Divine Light emanating from his own heart. 

The physical bod}^ of each and every man is a Great and Glorious 
Temple, not made with hands. No sound of a gavel was heard at its con- 
struction. The winking of an eye-lid puts to shame all mechanism, and 
man's Higher Self is the Light within, a spark from the Divine Essence. 
I ask you, my dear reader and Brother, to turn up that Glorious Light of 
your Higher Self, so that it may illuminate 3'Our inner vision. Turn 
it up, good and strong, that you may be enabled to discover ^-onr Higher 
Self, and the potential forces latent within you ; then will 3'ou realize that 
all things are within your own grasp. 

The Cubical stone is a fit emblem of the Deity, because it contains, 
in miniature, all things in the Kosmos. The Master artist, given an 
Ashlar and proper tools, is capable of carving from it anything of which 
his mind may conceive, no matter what the thing may be ; therefore, the 
Ashlar, or Cubical stone, t3?pifies the Deity Himself, through whom are 
all things made manifest. He contains within himself all things, and He 
is, Himself, all manifest or unmanifested Nature. 








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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 447 

The Lost Word we shall devote to another chapter, for now we gird 
upon our loins the sword of Knight-hood, and with golden spurs enter 
the Philosophical field of investigation, in search of " More Light." 

Every Scottish Rite Mason ; aye, every tnie Mason, is loyal to the 
cause of Liberty, Equality and Universal Brotherhood — because 
he knows full well that he himself is part of the Divine Jl^hole^ and that 
his fellow-man is another part, with equal rights to live, breathe and 
believe in a Deity according to his capabilities. Every True Mason will 
zealously assist his fellow-man in the upbuilding of the Symbolic Temple, 
the Holy House of the HigJiei- Se/f, wherein he will find, not only the 
Altar of Self-Sacrijice, but the ''^Antaskaraiia" or the bridge that sepa- 
rates him from all for which his soul has yearned and longed, and he will 
realize that the letters L. D. P. mean something more than to simply pass 
over the three spans of Ignorance^ Bigotry and Intolerance. 

There was a time when our ancient Brethren were not allowed to 
think or act as their conscience dictated. Death was the penalty to all 
who belonged to our glorious and beloved Fraternity. It was proscribed ; 
but still it was equally feared and dreaded. It was at this time that the 
meaning of the letters L. D. P. was veiled from the profane, and only 
understood by those who had assisted in the building of the Temple, witli 
the trowel in one hand and the sword in the other. They recognized 
that the words of which the letters are simply the initials — signified 
Liberie de Pensar ; that is — Liberty to Think, or Freedom of Thought 
and Conscience, with Political and Religious Liberty — a cattse to which 
all Good and True Masons have ever devoted themselves. 

The Bridge which spans the stream symbolizes the passage from 
Ignorance to Wisdom, from Slavery to Freedom, from Spiritual Bondage 
to Spiritual Freedom. In attaining to this glorious heritage of man 
we must distinctly understand that it is not gained in 'a day ; but only 
after a long and continued struggle with our animal passional nature can 
we hope to accomplish the subjugation of our Lozcer Set/, and in doing 
this we will have performed a deed greater than he who conquers a 
nation. We shall then be enabled to subdue Ignorance and Bigotry, 
trample beneath our feet Intolerance, Vice and Superstition, and pass 
across Antaskarana to Freedom, in the fullest sense of the word. It has 
been written that " The Initiates were many, but few wear the Thyrsus,^'' 



448 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

and how few are there worthy ? Every Brother should prove his Devo- 
tion and Fidelity to our beloved Fraternity and himself by deeds, not by 
words alone, then will not his merit go unrewarded. 

Did you, my dear Brothers and readers, ever realize the profound 
depth of philosophical thought veiled in the twelfth chapter of Eccle- 
siastes ? The beautiful and sublime significance is not very easily under- 
stood until we solve the meaning underlying the figurative language 
used therein. Therefore, for j'our special edification, we will endeavor to 
explain and interpret its true meaning, so that 3'ou ma}- be enabled to 
realize its significance and beauty. 

Verse i, " Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth 
while the evil days come not, nor the 3'ears draw nigh, when thou shalt 
say, I have no pleasure in them. 

2nd. " While the sun, or the light, or the moon, or the stars, be not 
darkened, nor the clouds return after the rain. 

3rd. " In the days when the keepers of the house shall tremble, and 
the strong men shall bow themselves, and the grinders cease because 
th&y are few, and those that look out of the windows be darkened. 

4th. " And the doors shall be shut in the street, when the sound of 
the grinding is low, and he shall rise up at the voice of the bird, and the 
daughters of music shall be brought low. 

5th. " Also when they shall be afraid of that which is high, and 
fears shall be in the way, and the almond tree shall flourish, and the 
grasshopper shall be a burden, and desire shall fail, because man goeth 
to his long home, and the mourners go about the streets. 

6th. " Or ever the silver cord be loosed, or the golden bowl be 
broken, or the pitcher be broken at the fountain, or the wheel broken at 
the cistern. 

7th. "Then shall the dust rettxrn to the earth as it was: and the 
spirit shall return unto God who gave it." 

You will notice, ni}' dear Brothers and readers, that I especiall}? call 
your attention to the first seven verses, and here is a synoptical inter- 
pretation : 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. -449 

1ST. ' REMEMBER NOW THY CRliATOR IN Tin<; DAY.S Ol'" TIIY YOUTH, Kl'Q." 

This is tlie time that we should learn to control our animal passional 
nature, as well as the desires of the animal man within us, for if we let 
(Kama) oitr drsircs master us in our youth, when temptation comes to 
us in Manhood, we are then, by force of habit, unable to control ourselves, 
and the " evil days " are nigh when we gratify our every wish. But the 
time will come to every man when he will say truthfully " I have no 
pleasure in them,'' The lust and frivolities of Life. 

2ND. " WHILE THE SUN, OR THE IJCIHT, ICTC." 

It is in the sunny days of our youth, or boyhood, and in the full 
radiance of Divine potential generative force, when the Moon, or female, 
tempts us before our eyes are darkened by age, that we should conquer 
self, then the dark clouds of evil deeds will never o'ershadow our declin- 
ing years, for there will have been no rain, only joy and hope in a 
glorious future. 

3RD. "IN THE DAY WHEN THIi KI^rEPERS OV THE HOUSE, I'lTC." 

The keepers of the house are man's lower animal nature. Lower 
Manas or the Personal i/y, and his Higher ligo or Ifiolier Manas, the 
Individuality. The Lower Manas includes the whole of the passional 
emotional desires and appetites, all its wants, such as .sexual desire, hatred, 
love, pride, anger, etc., in fact, it is what goes to make our animal man, 
or as it is sometimes called, our Animal Soul. While the Higher Ego, 
or Manas, that dwells and acts in us, is the other keeper of the hou.se. 
Now, between these two there is a continual battle being waged, for our 
Lower Manas, or Lower nature, animal like, is ever striving to gratify 
his evil desires, while our Higher Manas — a ray from the Divinity, is 
continually striving to curb the evil propensities of the animal Man. 
One is Good the other Evil, and thus the battle of Good and Evil, or God 
and the Devil, is continuously going on within us. And this is where we 
crucify Christ in our own heart, every day of our lives, if we permit our 
imbridled passions to dominate our Higher Manas. If we do so. Lower 
Manas drags down the Christ principle, to the level of its own Animal 
Soul., and thus Christ is crucified between two thieves — the Human and 
Animal Souls. 
29 



450 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Now, my dear Brothers, I want you to thoroughly comprehend this 
very imporant assertion, or definition, and possibly you may be better 
enabled to understand me if I quote you from Brother J. D. Buck, 
32° " Mystic Masonry," page 1S6 : 

" The Higher Self in man, called his ' God ' or Christos^ was form- 
erly ' crtxcified between two thieves,' namely, the Higher and Lower 
Manas. Hence the saying, ' when I would do good, evil is present with 
me.' As the body is crucified (a symbol of death and suffering), the 
Christ OS says to one of the thieves : ' This day shalt thou be with me in 
paradise.' This refers to the Higher Manas, now freed from the lower 
nature. The other ' thief,' or the brain-mind, is left to perish with the 
physical body of Christos on the Cross of Time. It may thus be seen 
how the battle-ground of Man's lower nature, with the higher, is the 
Mind, and that self-conquest, and the higher evolution are synonymous." 

"THE STRONG MEN," 

which is the dual nature of man, shall bow before the approach of Death. 

"THE GRINDERS SHALL CEASE BECAUSE THEY, ARE FEW." 

Beautiful^ illustrates the approach of old age, for as it creeps upon us 
our teeth decay and grow less, and are few indeed, compared to those in 
the days of our youth. 

"THOSE THAT LOOK OUT OF THE WINDOWS." 

The Higher and Lower Manas, the Human and Aitzniai Sou/s, no longer 
look forth from the windows (eyes) of the house, for the darkness of 
death o'er shadows it. 

"THE DOORS SHALL BE SHUT IN THE STREETS." 

Man grows deaf as old age comes upon him, and the doors (ears) are 
shut in the street on account of his sense of hearing failing him. ' 

"THE SOUND OF THE GRINDING IS LOW." 

Because now it is difficult for him to hear the most familiar sounds. 

"RISE UP AT THE VOICE OF THE BIRD." 

The soul was represented by the ancient Egyptians by a bird. It is 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 451 

the voice of his own spiritual Soul that tells him to awake and rise into 
Life, by passing through the portals of Death. 

"THE DAUGHTERS OF MUSIC SHALU BE BROUGHT LOW." 

The voice of Man, nearing old age and dissolution, fails him, and there 
is no music in him, for the organs that originally produced it have lost 
their vocal powers. 

"WHEN THEY SHALL BE AFRAID OF THAT WHICH IS HIGH." 

Higher and Lower Manas has, during earth-life, sown the seed of 
thoughts and acts, and now they are about to reap the harvest in the 
Karmic effects of what they had sown. 

"THE ALMOND TREE SHALL FLOURISH." 

In extreme old age man's hair shall grow as silvery white as the 
blossoms of the Almond tree. He now grows old and feeble and is 
unable to bear the slightest burden, the weight of a grasshopper would, 
comparatively speaking, be a burden unto him. 

"AND DESIRE SHALL FAIL." 

Desires naturally desert the aged, Life contains no pleasures for them — 
they wait. 

"MAN GOETH TO HIS LONG HOME." 

The long home signifies Death and the Future Life. 

"AND THE MOURNERS GO ABOUT THE STREETS." 

These are friends and relatives who mourn his death, for there is no man 
so bad but that there will be some one who will mourn for him. 

"THE SILVER CORD BE LOOSED." 

Is the thread of Life which binds the true man to the physical body. 
When it snaps in twain death ensues, the Spirit is freed, and the shard or 
shell is left behind, just in the same manner as in the hatching of a 
chicken ; when the time comes, the chick pecks itself from out the old 
shard or shell, and goes forth into life and definition. 

"THE GOLDEN BOWL BE BROKEN." 

Is the head with its seven gateways to the senses, with its five attributes, 
container of the brain, that is looked upon as the organ of Consciousness 
and the seven Harmonies. 



452 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

"OR THE PITCHER BE BROKEN AT THE FOUNTAIN, OR THE WHEEL BROKEN AT 

THE CISTERN." 

The "pitcher" is the left ventricle that empties into the Aor/a. The 
" Fountain " is the heart itself. The " wheel " is the arterial and veinous 
system combined, throngh which the life-giving forces are continnally cir- 
culating, and the " Cistern " is the right ventricle, into which the veinous 
blood is continually flowing. In order that you ma}' better understand 
this let me explain to you the circulating system, which is two-fold. 

There is the lesser and the greater circuit of circulation, as in all 
natural processes, there is no beginning, neither is there any end. But 
we will begin at (the Pitcher), the Left ventricle of the heart, from 
which the Arterial cherr^v red blood is " poured " into the Aorta, on its 
Life-giving mission throughout the whole of the body. At the extremi- 
ties of the Arteries we have a system of capillaries, so verj' minute that 
the microscope is needed in order to detect them. These capillaries con- 
nect the Arterial with the Veinous S3'stem (forming the "wheel"), where 
marked chemical changes take place, converting the cherr}- red blood 
into the dark blue veinous. The veins bring back this used-up-blood to 
the heart again, emptying it into the right Auricle, from there it passes 
into the (cistern) Right ventricle, from which it is forcibl}' expelled b}' the 
contraction of the Heart (" Fountain '"), into and through the pulmonary 
arter\', which, b}' the wa}-, carries veinous blood. In the Lungs it 
becomes electrified, ox5'genized and vivified, when it is forced back to the 
heart again, entering at the Left Auricle, from whence it passes into the 
Left Ventricle and is started out once again on its life-giving journey 
throughout the whole of the Arterial ramifications. 

The " Wheel " performs its revolution in this w-ay and the whole of 
the body is built up from the circulating life-forces in the blood. 

"THE DUST RETURN TO THE EARTH." 

Which is plainly demonstrated by the disintegration of the physical body 
at Death. 

" AND THE SPIRIT SHALL RETURN UNTO GOD WHO GAVE IT.'' 

In reaching the first of the Philosophical degrees of our beloved An- 
cient and Accepted Scottish Rite, our worthj- aspirant and Brother enters 
upon a glorious field, wherein he will find the True Light, which will 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 453 

lead him on to a knowledge of all that was lost, and the way to its Re- 
covery. The ruins of empires will be at his feet, and their broken 
columns will be a verification to him of the wondrous knowledge that 
pertained to our Ancient Brethren. The understanding of which will 
give him courage to suffer and conquer in the Cause, and Strength to 
work for its final triumph. He will be devoted and consecrated to the 
service of Tnit/i, Justice and J'iiiite, until, eventually, he will be found 
worthy to open the Great Book of the Law, by breaking the Seven Seals, 
and learn the True meaning of the great Truths contained within its 
sacred pages. Truths that have been gathered from the East and the 
West, and from out the heart of the sacred Books of all people. 

The great banners of IMasonry are Faith, Hope and Charity, 
under which all men may gather from all nations and from every clime 
in the One Great Cause. Masonry is not a Religion^ in the general 
accepted sense of that word, with Creeds and Dogmas compelling blind 
Faith in any part of it, and in the account of the suffering and Death of 
Christ, every Brother as I hereinbefore stated, may believe as he sees fit. 
Let me quote you once again from " Mystic Masonry,'' page 103 et seq. 

" The candidate is taught not merely to tolerate another's religion, but 
to respect it as his own, though still adhering to that into which he was 
born. To make reasonable this obligation, he is shown through the Kaba- 
lah, or Secret Doctrine, that at the heart of every great religion lie the 
same eternal Truths. Forms and observances only differ. The Ineffable 
Name is spelled in man}? "^vays, yet the J f^ord is one and eternal. Masonry 
is not a Universal Science, but a world-wide Religion owing allegiance to 
no one creed, and can adopt no sectarian dogma, as such, without thereby 
ceasing to be Masonic. Drawn from the Kabalah and taking the Jewish 
or Christian verbiage, or symbols, it but discerns in them universal truths, 
which it recognizes in all other religions. Many degrees have been Chris- 
tianized, only to perish ; as every degree eventually will, if circumscribed 
b}^ narrow creeds, and dwarfed to the bigoted apprehension of a few sec- 
tarians, to exclude good men of any other communion. Is Jesus any the 
less Chrisios because Christna was called "The Good Shepherd?" or 
because the Mexican Christ was crucified between two thieves ? or because 
Hiram was three days in a grave before he was resurrected ? Are we not 
as selfish in our religion as in our other possessions ? Then, wh}', is man, 



454 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

while cherishing as his most sacred possession the religion of his fathers, 
eternally seeking to degrade and destroy that of his Brother ? 

" The Great Republic, to which Brother Pike refers, is the Ideal of 
Masonry ; the Genius that hovers, like a protecting angel, over the Lodge. 
Make it impossible for a Jew or Parsee, Buddhist or Brahmin, to enter any 
Lodge without witnessing the profanation of his sacred altars or contempt 
for his religion, and the angel hides her face and retreats from altars 
already profaned by unbrotherliness. Masonry is the Universal Religion 
only because, and onl}^ so long, as it embraces all religions. For this 
reason, and this alone, it is universal and eternal. Neither persecution 
nor misrepresentation can ever destroy it. ' It ma}^ find no place in a 
generation of bigots ; it may retire for a century ; but again comes a 
Master Builder with the key to the ' shut Palace of the King,' throws 
open the blinds, lets in the Light, kindles anew the fire on the sacred 
altar, clears away the rubbish, when behold ! the tesselated pavement is 
as bright as when it first came from the quarries of Truth, the jewels are 
of pure gold and brighten at the touch, and the great Lights are undimmed 
and undecayed, ' When the candidate is ready the Master appears.' And 
men are yet so foolish and so vile as to imagine that they can destroy this 
heirloom of the ages : this heritage from the Immortals ! No age is so dark 
as to quench entirely the Light of the Lodge ; no persecution so bloody as 
to blot out its votaries ; no anathemas of Popes so lasting as to count one 
second on its Dial of Time ! These, one and all, serve only to keep the 
people in darkness, and retard the reign of Universal Brotherhood. There- 
fore, for humanity — the Great Orphan — the real Master laments. He 
smiles at the passions of Popes or Kings, and pities the folly of man. 
He only ivaits^ indifferent as to results, knowing these to be under eter- 
nal Law ; but ready and willing, whenever and wherever the instruction 
entering the listening ear may find lodgment in the faithful breast." 

Masonry teaches toleration and the Union of all Religions and all 
philosophies. Within her temples the Jew, the Mohammedan, the Chris- 
tian, the Buddhist, the Brahmin or Parsee, may stand beside a common' 
altar, and be pledged upon the self-same emblems, and be devoted to the 
self-same cause that teaches to its members the duties they owe to their 
God, their fellow-man, and to themselves, and in this way we realize that 
it is our bounden duty to love our neighbor as ourself. Then will we 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 455 

discover the same truth that the rich man told unto Jesus that " there is 
no neighbor, and there is no self, all is in the Father, and of the Father, 
and in loving him I love all things." 

We do not claim for any one creed more Truth than another, for in 
every religion there is a basis of Truth, as well as pure Morality. From 
the earliest ages men have believed in an unseen, governing and control- 
ling and directing Power, and in every corner of the earth this Great 
Power has been located, by the various peoples of the earth, in Spatial 
depths around them. 

Masonry does not teach the existence of an Anthropomorphic God, 
who is made in the image of man, with all the human attributes ; but, of 
course, if a brother desires to believe in such an one, it is his privilege so 
to do, and we should not, under any circumstances, revile him for his faith, 
or his God, be he Jew, Christian, Parsee or Hindu. 

The so-called New Law, as taught by Jesus of Nazareth, is as old as 
the stars, and has been taught in every epoch of the world's history, and 
the sooner we understand this fact the better it will be for ourselves and 
our fellowman. We should never scoff at, or revile our Brother, because 
he believes God Loves him, when we believe God cannot Love any one, 
because God is Love and not Loving. Then if we believe that God is 
Love, let us follow the law of Love, by never permitting anything that a 
Brother may believe, say, or do, to offend us, so that the Law may be 
broken through our finite understanding of it. The Law of God passeth 
all understanding and we must learn, by experience, that it is better to 
love than to hate. 

It is our bounden duty not to strive to be better than our Brother ; 
but to be better than ourselves, by conquering self and subduing our 
passions. We should never forget that the more we have, the more 
we owe to our Brother, and that it is our duty to give abundantly of our 
store, to all those who are in need of our assistance. My dear Brothers, 
let me quote 3'ou from " Supernatural Religion," by an English clergy- 
man, Vol. II, page 489 : 

" We gain infinitely more than we lose in abandoning belief in the 
Divine Revelation. Whilst we retain pure and unimpaired the treasure 
of Christian Morality, we relinquish nothing, but the debasing elements 
added to it by human superstition. We are no longer bound to believe 



456 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

a theology which outrages reason and moral sense. We are freed from 
base anthropomorphic views of God and His government of the universe; 
and from Jewish Mythology we rise to higher conceptions of an infinitely 
wise and beneficent Being, hidden from our finite minds, it is true, in the 
impenetrable glory of Divinity, but whose laws of wondrous comprehen- 
siveness and perfection we can perceive in operation around us. 

" We are no longer disturbed by visions of fitful interference with 
the order of Nature ; but we recognize that the Being, who regulates the 
universe, is without variableness or shadow of turning. It is singular 
how little there is in the supposed Revelation of alleged information, 
however incredible, regarding that which is beyond the limits of human 
thought, but that little is of a character which reason declares to be the 
wildest delusion. Let no man, whose belief in the reality of a Divine 
Revelation may be destroyed by such an inquiry, complain that he has 
lost a precious possession, and that nothing is left but a blank. The 
Revelation not being a reality, that which he has lost was but an illusion, 
and that which is left is the Truth. If he be content with illusions, he 
will speedily be consoled ; if he be a lover only of truth, instead of 
a blank he will recognize that the reality before him is full of great 
peace. 

" If we know less than we supposed of man's destiny, we may at 
least rejoice that we are no longer compelled to believe that which is 
unworthy. The limits of thought once attained, we may well be 
unmoved in the assurance that all that we do know, of the regulation of 
the universe being so perfect and wise, all that we do not know must be 
equally so. Here enters the true and noble Faith, which is the child of 
Reason. If we have believed a system, the details of which must at one 
time or another have shocked the mind of ever}' intelligent man, and 
believed it simply because it was supposed to be revealed, we maj- equally 
believe in the wisdom and goodness of what is not revealed. The mere 
act of communication to us is nothing ; Faith in the perfect ordering of 
all things is independent of Revelation. 

" The arguments so often emploj'ed by Theologians, that Divine 
Revelation is necessary for man, and that certain views contained in that 
Revelation are required by our moral conscidusness, is purely imaginary, 
and derived from the Revelation which it seeks to maintain. The only 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 457 

thing absolutely necessary for man is Truth, and to that, and that alone, 
must our moral consciousness adapt itself." 

It is asserted that when Christ was crucified upon the cross they 
placed above his head the Latin letters I. N. R. I., signifying, "Jesus 
Nazarenus, Rex Judasorum," (Jesus of lYazairlh, King of the Jews). 
While others interpret the meaning of these initials quite differenth^, 
as : " Igne Natiira Renovatur Integra" Entire Nature is Renovated by 
Fire. 

Dr. Wynn Westcott, Fra Rosa" Cnicis^ F. T. S., states in his " Her- 
metic Notes," in "Lucifer," Vol. VI, page 275, that "A very curious old 
Rosicrucian Manuscript passed through my hands a few years ago ; it 
gave a new rendering to the initials I. N. R. I. The Christian meaning 
of which is known to all, and which has several Alchemic significations, 
such as /g)ie Nitniin Ron's Im'cntitnr (' by fire the Nitre of the dew is 
discovered'). lammin Nour Ruach labesha, the Hebrew for ('Water, 
Fire, Air, Earth'). Igne Natura Regenerando Integrat ('Nature 
renews, in Regenerating by fire '). Igne Natura Renovatur Integra (' By 
fire Nature is renewed in its entirety '). 

" The rendering I now publish for the first time is not a simple, use 
of initials, but the straining of the symbol shows the greater desire of 
denoting the doctrine : I. Ntra vos est Regum De I (' The kingdom of 
God is within you "). This seems to me a clear acknowledgment of the 
Higher Self within a man, which, if the Man rendered himself sufBcientty 
pure and spiritual, can communicate with Powers above him and to him 
Divine. 

" The same manuscript also gave this reading : ' In Nobis Regnum 
Intelligentia (' The Kingdom of the intelligence is in us '). From the 
same source comes also the following: 

" Force arising in the North passes to the South. Intelligence arising 
in the South passes to the North. Initiation arising in the East passes 
to the West. 

" But to crown the above let me state that the Jesuits, who have ever 
been the bitter, unscrupulous and uncompromising enemies of Masonr}- 
frame for it their own infamous phrase 'Justum Necare Regnas Impios:' 
' It is Lawful to Slay Irreligious Kings.' " Yes, or any one else whom 
they considered Irreligious. From the above we find that there is quite a 



458 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

difference in the interpretations of the letters dawied to have been placed 
above the head of Christ upon the Cross, when crucified upon Calvary. 

To-day there are millions of people who never heard of him, and if 
they have, they do not believe in him, nor do they wish to do so ; and yet, 
again, there are millions who do most earnestly and firmly believe that 
he was the Son of God, born of a Virgin, a Being of Divine Nature — in 
fact, that he was the Word made manifest in the flesh. 

There are countless numbers who believe that he is yet to come, and 
the}^ wait with patience the coming of the Redeemer. Again there are 
countless millions who believe that he was but a man, with all the attri- 
butes of man, and could not be God and Man at the same time. Others 
believe the whole life and acts of Christ to be but an Allegory. While 
there are a vast number of people, throughout the world universal, who 
believe most earnestly and sincerely that Christ, or Christos, dwells in the 
heart of every living, breathing Man to-day, and that he will never be 
more manifest in the world or our hearts than he is right now. 

I claim that every man or Brother Mason has a perfect right to his 
own belief in this matter, and should be free from the sneers and scoffs 
of others, .even though their views upon this subject do not coincide 
with his fellows. Masonr}^ existed thousands of j^ears before Christ was 
born, or dreamed of, and consequently it compels no man to believe 
either one way or the other. But before concluding this subject and 
chapter let me quote you from "Morals and Dogmas," page 524: 

" We do not undervalue the importance of any Truth. We utter no 
word that can be deemed irreverent by any one, of any faith. We do not 
tell the Moslem that it is only important for him to believe that there is 
but one God, and wholly unessential whether Mahomet was his prophet. 
We do not tell the Hebrew that the Messiah whom he expects was born 
in Bethlehem nearly two thousand years ago ; and that he is a heretic, 
because he will not so believe. And as little do we tell the sincere Chris- 
tian that Jesus of Nazareth was but a man, like us, or his history but 
the unreal revival of an older legend. To do either is beyond our juris- 
diction. Masonry, of no one age, belongs to all time ; of no one religion 
it finds its great truths in all." 

Every religion had a common origin, and underwent changes, from 
time to time, to suit the people of the various epochs in which they lived. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 459 

It was during the reign of Constantine, that the believers in the ancient 
teachings, were compelled to abandon their old faith and adopt the New 
when all records of the Ancient Wisdom were sought for in order to 
destroy them. 

The Secret Doctrine Avas the fountain and source of the Wisdom- 
Religion itself, whose doctrines were taught in the Ancient Mysteries, of 
which our own beloved Scottish Rite is a lineal descendant. All relig- 
ions in existence to-day have descended from, and are related to, the 
Wisdom-Religion of India, which was the Primitive Wisdom Religion of 
the Ancient World. Masonry has preserved the sublimely beautiful 
teachings of this profound Wisdom in the various parts of her Ineffable 
and Philosophical Degrees, and evidences of the Truth of this statement 
are to be found in the Holy Doctrine and Royal Secret, and proves the 
antiquit}^ of our most Illustrious Fraternity, and its relationship to the 
Indian, Mazdean and ancient Egyptian Mysteries. 

We can trace the descent of the various Christian Sects, and prove 
they had a common origin, and that they all contain the same grand 
Truths, only clothed in different garments. Therefore, how foolish it is 
for men to quarrel over fictitious narratives, supposed to have happened 
in the early days of Christianity. They should be more charitable to the 
beliefs of others, more certain of their own, and should never, under any 
circumstances, dictate to any man what he should or should not believe. 
Masonry most assuredly does not claim an 3' right to alter the belief of any 
Brother be he Jew, Gentile, Moslem or Hindu. 




GE. Balding 33 '^N 



GRAND OFFICERS OF THE NORTHERN JURISDICTION. 



'Fogaging up ii)t Nile— (!B.\aminhig Com^s antr 
CentpIrs—^Jaintincjs— gjculpturcs. 



461 



QIc have passed over cities in song renowned; 
Silent they He with the desert around; 
Hie have passed o'er the river whose tide hath rolled, 
Hll dark with the warrior-blood of old. 

— F. Hemans. 



462 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 463 



CHAPTER XX. 

VOYAGING UP THE NILE— EXAMINING TOMBS AND TEMPLES-PAINTINGS— 

SCULPTURES. 

IT seems very difi&cult to add anything further to that which has 
already been told about Egypt and the ancient Egyptians, their 
tombs, temples, monuments and mummies, as well as to give addi- 
tional information pertaining to their religion, arts, sciences and philoso- 
phies. I went into that country for the express purpose of examining 
for myself the most extraordinary ruins of those glorious temples 
which to-day lie scattered throughout the Avhole of Egypt, and to learn 
something pertaining to their ancient wisdom. In viewing these magnifi- 
cent ruins, the work of the mighty Pharaohs of the " Golden Age " of 
Egypt, I was so filled with awe and admiration, with what I saw and 
learned, that I concluded to write an account of my researches in the land 
of " Old Khemi," the cradle of ancient Masonry. The land of the 
ancient Mysteries. The land that gave to Greece her culture and to 
Rome her civilization. The land that gave intellectual power to all who 
drank from that fountain from which Moses drew his wondrous know- 
ledge and inspiration. 

I shall therefore describe my journey up the river Nile, that I may 
give you a complete description of this most wonderful country, and that 
you may be enabled to trace from her tombs, temples, monuments and 
mummies the rise, progress, decline and fall of this most extraordinary 
Land of Egypt and her people. 

This work is called " Egypt, The Cradle of Ancient Masonry," 
therefore I do not think that I should do you, or my subject justice, 
unless I gave you a thorough description of the valley of the Nile, her 
tombs, temples, monuments and mummies, while writing upon ancient 
Masonry and the profound philosophy that belongs to our most Illus- 
trious Fraternity. I do most earnestly desire to impress upon your 
minds that Masonry originated in the " Land of the Vedas " and that it 



464 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

was cradled upon the banks of the Nile. I do not desire to give you a 
full account of what took place on our journey, but shall tell you of the 
various points of interest, giving descriptions of tombs, temples and 
monuments, interspersed with a few little incidents of our voyage, in 
order to vary the monotony of a trip of six hundred miles from Cairo to 
Philse, in a Dahabiyeh, upon the bosom of one of the most interesting 
rivers in the world — the Nile. 

We are now approaching the former home of the crocodile, but we 
shall find them very scarce on our journey. It is strange, but neverthe- 
less true, that these saurians are never found below Minia, except on 
very rare occasions, although Herodotus speaks of them fighting with 
dolphins, at the mouth of the Nile ; but, of course, this is a " fish story " 
of our learned and celebrated historian. The liippopatanius is never or 
seldom found below the second cataract^ but occasionally there have been 
one or two found below it. 

I arose early that morning at Roda, which is quite a large town, on 
the west bank of the Nile, containing post, telegraph offices and railway 
station, located close to the river. There is quite a large sugar factory 
here, and also several mosques and bazaars, and close to one of them 
Hassan purchased four hundred eggs for one dollar. Very nearly 
opposite this place, but a little to the northeast, on the east bank of the 
river, is the ruins of the celebrated city of Antinoe, which lies among the 
palm groves of ShekJi Abada. 

The cit}^ of Antinoe was built by order of the Emperor Hadrian, 
and the cause of its erection was as follows : Antinous, a young man of 
Bithynia, who dearly loved the Emperor, accompanied him on his journey 
into Eg3'pt, where it appears that Hadrian was told by an oracle, that he 
could only secure happiness by sacrificing what he most dearly loved. 
The youth Antinous, hearing of this, cast himself into the bosom of old 
God Nilus, and was drowned. In commemoration of this event, Hadrian 
erected and dedicated this city, and instituted games and sacrifices to 
honor the young man who had died for love of him. 

Shekh Abada is surrounded with a very fine palm grove, whose trees 
are noted for their size and beauty, among which lie a few pieces of stone 
and a corinthian capital scattered here and there, with some broken 
columns, etc. There are but very few ruins or relics to be found there 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 465 

to-da}^ belonging to the ancient city tliat originally stood liere, for the 
reason that the Khedive burned all the stone that he could find for lime, 
to be used in the building of his sugar factory at Roda. 

There are a great many Christian antiquities to be found in a little 
village called Dei' Abu Hoimes, " The Convent of St. John." A short dis- 
tance from here, there is a very ancient church located in a large quarry, 
in Avhich many of the chambers were decorated with paintings that 
represent subjects taken from the New Testament. A little further on 
we reach the village of Der en-Nakl^ " The convent of the Palms," near 
which is the tomb of Thoth-hetep, the son of Kai, wherein was found the 
celebrated picture of the transportation of a Colossus. It represents the 
method by which these people moved their immense stones, statues, 
monuments, etc., across the desert sands. 

This figure shows a Colossus twenty feet in height upon a sled, 
fastened to it with ropes. There are little pads, or cushions, placed at 
different places around the statue, in order to prevent it from being 
chafed, or injured, in its removal or transportation. There are four very 
large ropes fastened to the sled, to each of which there are forty-three 
men stationed, making one hundred and seventy-two men in all, to pull 
the sled. Standing in the lap of the statue is the chanty man, clapping 
his hands and beating time, no doubt, to the song he sings, so that they 
maj' be enabled to pull in unison. There is a man pouring some kind of 
liquid upon the skids or planks so that it might slide along easier. It is 
a very instructive picture, and the only one that throws any light on tlie 
ancient methods of moving these immense monolithic stones, statues, 
etc., for the purpose of building and decorating their tombs and temples 
throughout the " Land of Egypt." There are mau}^ very interesting 
places to visit in this vicinity, on both sides of the river. We can find 
ruins of ancient cities with dilapidated tombs and temples in this Nome 
well worth seeing. 

After leaving the tomb of Thoth-hetep we did not return to Shekh 
Abada, but kept right on to Der el-Bersha, because we had told Hassan 
to take the Dahabiyeh on to that place and await us there. Long before 
we got to our floating home we could hear the songs of our crew, echoing 
in the quiet evening air, as the lengthening shadows of the palms crept 
down toward the bosom of old God Nilus. We returned to our boat just 



466 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

about sun down, and liad time to refresh ourselves, with a bath, when 
dinner was served, to which we all did ample justice. If we ever 
appreciated a good comfortable home it was that night, for we had been 
riding, tramping and climbing around all day long, and were quite tired 
and weary. In fact so much so, that I sat down and arranged my notes, 
then went on deck, smoked a cigar, took a " brandy pawnee," and retired 
early, hoping that there would be a good favorable breeze in the morning, 
so that we might be enabled to reach Haggi Quandil the next day, as we 
were very desirous of visiting Tel el-Amarna. 

I had a very refreshing night's rest and did not awake until the 
liarsh and discordant notes of the gong rang out in the early morning. 
After toast and coffee, we went on deck and found a lovely morning, but 
not a breath of air astir. The mist was vanishing in the rays of the 
morning sun, and the river shone like burnished silver as our sailors went 
out upon the tow path and harnessed themselves to the towline, and our 
boat began to creep along at a snail's pace. Our men went jumping, 
singing, pulling and shouting like a lot of school boys, as if tracking in 
the hot sun was a pleasure and a pastime, instead of labor. I really 
believe that, they liked to be out upon the tow path at times, and this 
appeared to be one of them, but, possibly, it was because we had told 
Hassan to tell our Reis Abdallah that we should give them a sheep, 
and what was needed for a grand fantasia, on our arrival at Asyttt, where 
they were going to bake bread and have a day to themselves, to which we 
had agreed, and very likely this was the cause of their capers and jollity. 

We went down to an enjoyable breakfast, and as we sat at the table 
chatting and talking of the paintings in the grottos of Beni Hassan, 
comparing them with those in the tomb of Tih, the air resounded 
with the word " Timseach " crocodiles. We hurried on deck, and on look- 
ing around we saw three large crocodiles basking in the rays of the 
morning sun. The boat was sheered into the bank, as Abdallah our 
captain knew that we were very anxious to get one if possible. They did 
not seem to be disturbed at the approach of our boat, so we took our rifles 
and clambered up the river bank, walking carefully and quietly along, 
until we came opposite the small island where we had seen them. Then 
creeping very cautiously up the bank toward the river, until we could see 
them lying in plain view, upon a sandy spit, not over two hundred and 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 46T 

fifty yards distant, we agreed to shoot what appeared to be the largest one, 
and to the right of the " covey." We took steady aim, with a good rest 
for our rifles, pulled the triggers, and the one that we fired at gave one 
tremendous plunge and dragged himself to the river and disappeared from 
our sight, coloring the water red with its blood. The other waddled off 
down to the river, plunged in and disappeared. 

We were very soon in our little boat, and arrived at the Island, when 
we found that one of the party had shot at one of the other crocodiles, the 
ball entering its mouth, severing the spinal cord. The ball was lying 
flattened among the broken bones just beneath the skin, and had actually 
not made a mark upon it. I inquired how such a shot had been made,. 
and was informed that the crocodile was lying with its head and chest 
towards us, and that the shot had been aimed directly at its throat, but, 
just as the trigger was pulled, the crocodile lowered its head and the ball 
entered its mouth, broke and cut the spinal cord, and also the bones at the 
base of the brain, and laid him out quivering upon the sands. 

It was quite a prize for us, and we were very glad to get it, and after 
taking it on board the dahabiyeh we measured it, and found that it was 
eight feet four inches from the end of its nose to the end of its tail. I 
have tried repeatedly to obtain another, but although I have shot a great 
many I was never able to capture a single one of them, for they all got 
away from me. On a previous trip I went far above the Khartum, when 
I secured over a dozen, besides some very fine Hippopotamus. 

On arriving at the nearest point for us to visit the tombs of Tel-el 
Amariia, we saw a lot of donkeys, with Ali, one of our sailors, shouting" 
to our captain to come in to the bank, for Hassan had sent him on from 
Der-el-Bai'sha to engage donkeys for us, and to have them in readiness 
for us by the time our boat would get there. The dahabij^eh was soon 
alongside the bank, when we scrambled ashore and liiounted our little 
animals and were very soon scurrying off to the mountains with our guide 
iu the lead. Our boat went on to Haggi Qjiandil to await our coming. 

In the seventeenth chapter I referred to the King Khu-n-Aten, who 
left the cit}^ and home of his fathers on account of his very peculiar 
religious belief, and built for himself a New City and capital that was 
located here between Tel-el-Ainarna and Haggi Qiimtdil. Between these 
two places he built himself a most magnificent palace, a stupendous affair, 



468 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

whose interior apartments were decorated with gold and silver ornaments 
and inlaid with precious stones. He adorned it all with beautiful paint- 
ings, sculptures and magnificent specimens of ancient Egyptian works 
of art. 

We were visiting the ruins of this palace and city for the purpose of 
examining for ourselves the site of the city and capital of KIiii-n-Aten. 
The rock tombs of Tcl-el-Aniarna are quite a distance from the river, and 
were the repositories of the courtiers and various officials of the court of 
this once celebrated Pharaoh, who belonged to the eighteenth dynasty. 
These tombs form three different groups, and it is in the center one that 
we found the resting place of this great King and a few others that 
belonged to his dynasty and court. The great majority of these tombs, 
in the various groups, are entered through a fore-court, and upon the 
walls of nearl\- all the tombs that we visited were pictured incidents and 
scenes of royal life, etc. Lepsius and Mr. F. Petrie made some very 
valuable discoveries among these ruins. It was here that they found the 
celebrated clay tablets inscribed with the cuneiform characters of Babylon, 
and many with other peculiar characters written or inscribed upon them, 
representing the foreign correspondence between Khu-n-Aten and the 
Kings of Babylon, Assj'ria and other countries. 

After viewing these interesting tombs, etc., we rode on to Haggi 
Ouandil, where we soon found our boat and a couple of bottles of Bass' 
bitter beer which we took in order to get the fine sands out of our throats. 
There was a nice breeze blowing when we got on board, so the boat was 
punted off from the bank, the sails were loosed, and off we went again 
accompanied by the usual vocal music of our crew. After a bath and 
smoke the gong rang for dinner, and when we came on deck again we 
found our boat bowling along at a very rapid rate. 

What a glorious night it was, the sky perfectly clear and cloudless, 
the stars shining down upon us with a sweet radiant light, the crescent 
moon setting in the west, the waters of the Nile shining with ^ a soft 
shimmering glow, and there was nought to be heard but the water of the 
river rippling under our counter, and the low hum of the voices of our 
sailors, who sang their last song for the night, and were seeking the drows}^ 
god. We retired to our cabin, put our notes in order and were soon off 
into the " Laud of Nod," only to awaken in the early morning to find our 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 4G9 

boat tied up to the bank. Our sailors were getting their breakfast, aud 
our own co£fee and toast were banded to us, and as they were preparing 
for the tow-path we took our guns, intending to walk on ahead and shoot 
some quail, etc., but we had scarcely gone a hundred yards before a light 
air arose, when we turned back and got on board again. The boat was 
punted oif into the stream, our sails loosed and we were off again with 
our big sails swelling out full and round, Avhile our sailors squatted around 
and their songs rang out the same as usual. 

The wind freshened a:id we went ploughing along through the water 
like a steamer, villages went drifting by and w-e saw the mountains and 
bluffs of Abu Feda away off to the south-east. We had been warned of 
the dangers of sudden squalls that apparently lurk in the cliffs of these 
mountains. Our captain, pilot, and in fact our whole crew, knew full 
well that this especial part of the river was very dangerous, and conse- 
quently every man was on the watch, but fortunately we had no trouble 
at all in passing these mountains, excepting a few sudden puffs from 
opposite quarters, and at one time we were caught flat aback, but just as 
suddenly our sails filled again and we continued on our journey before a 
good stiff breeze that sent us spinning along with terrific speed. The 
wind changed no more, and we very soon left the bluffs and mountains 
far behind us, and to tell the truth I was very glad of it. There are a 
great many strange stories told of accidents at that place, and it was not 
until we had left it far behind that our sailors seemed themselves again. 
We now saw Maiifa/iit, with its towers and domes, which is quite a large 
town, situated about two miles from the river. It has post, telegraph 
oflSces and a railway station, with a population of about thirteen thousand 
inhabitants. It is a town of importance which we would liked to have 
seen, but as the wind was still blowing good and strong, we kept on our 
course towards As3mt. 

After passing Manfalnt, the valley widens out considerably, and we 
found both banks of the river extremely fertile and everything growing 
in luxuriant abundance ; the air was pure and fresh, the sun was shining 
brilliantly from an unclouded sky, and the mountains in the distance had 
a soft glow of crimson light thrown around them, continually changing 
to deeper and softer tones ; in fact, the whole scene was perfectly lovely. 
Every little turn in the river opened up a series of charming vistas that 



470 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

delighted the eye. As we went sailing along, the minarets and domes 
of Asyut were plainly visible, first on one side, and then on the other. 
We continued winding along with the sinuosities of the river, and it 
seemed as if we should never get there, for at one point it appeared as 
if we were leaving it behind us, but at length we turned the last bend, 
when our sailors started up their songs, laughed and danced in the great- 
est glee, and in a ver}' little while we found our boat tied up at the 
port of Asyut " El-Hamra " — the town itself lying back in the plain and 
under the foot of a large mountain. 

This place {Asyut) is the capital of middle Egypt. It has a number 
of hotels, post and telegraph offices located hear the depot. There is one 
thing that we noticed in this place that is different from the rest of the 
towns between here and Cairo, and that is, there are quite a large number 
of houses here that are built in the European style. Asyut has a popu- 
lation of at least thirty-two thousand inhabitants, and there is a very fine 
college located here, for the accommodation of both bo3'S and girls 
belonging to the American IMission. There are good baths and very fine 
bazaars to be found here ; also a cotton factor}^ and several mosques, one 
of which is noted for its tall minaret. There is a market held here every 
Saturday, when the villagers come in from the surrounding country in 
order to dispose of their goods, and buy what they need for their own use. 
During this time the bazaars are filled to repletion, for here one can find 
all kinds of commodities that have been brought, not only from all parts 
of Egypt and Arabia, but also from Europe and America as Avell. We 
saw here in these bazaars very fine linen goods, embroidered leather goods 
of all kinds, and some very fine ostrich feathers, with numberless articles 
from the Soudan, and very conspicuously exposed were all varieties of 
the beautiful pottery the}' manufacture here. Any one who visited the 
World's Fair at Chicago, or the Mid- Winter Fair in San Francisco, must 
most certainly have noticed the beautiful bottles, pipe bowls, black 
tazzas, paper weights of both black and red pottery, and those exquisite 
coffee services, etc., all of which came from this place {Asyut). 

This town rises out from amidst a very fine belt of palm trees, and a 
canal carries the water from the river to the towm, whose banks are 
adorned with beautiful sycamore and fig trees. The canal reaches the 
Government Buildings and beyond it, and its banks form a very nice 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 471 

promenade. We were very anxious to see about our letters, so we 
hurried off up town to the post office to enquire for our mail, and I was 
very glad indeed to receive two from home, three from friends in Cairo 
and Alexandria, and two from Lahore, India. Our sailors had this 
evening entirely to themselves, and as some of them belonged to this 
place, they asked for and received permission to go and visit some of their 
relations and friends. We spent the night ashore with some acquaint- 
ances whom we knew in Cairo, who were returning to the city, having 
been up as far as the second Cataract, and who were visiting the various 
points of interest on their way down the river. We arose early the next 
morning, having decided to visit some of the tombs, etc., that were located 
not far from here, and strolled down to the port of El-Hmnra and to our 
Dahabiyeh. 

We found that nearly the whole of our crew were off baking bread, 
so I sent Salame to pick out some good donkeys for us, while we supplied 
ourselves with candles, etc., for the trip. In a very short time Salame 
returned to tell us the donkeys were all ready, so we went on shore, 
mounted our little animals, and were soon speeding out along a very 
nice road that led up to the foot of the mountain, where we left our 
donkeys and clambered up to the tombs on foot. 

The first one at which we stopped was called Stabl Antar^ the 
entrance to which is fully thirty feet high and hewn out of the solid 
calcerous rock. We entered a vaulted corridor leading on to a great hall, 
with two side chambers, and a sanctuary, and found the ceilings of these 
tombs to be vaulted and ornamented with peculiar devices and designs 
which have been considered by a great man}' people who have visited these 
tombs to have originated from Greek patterns ; but we know that could 
not be so, because these patterns and tombs were in existence long cen- 
turies before Greek Art was known. On some of the ceilings we could 
plainly trace the five pointed stars on a groundwork of yellow and blue, 
but it was very difficult to trace the designs, for they had been so black- 
ened and discolored by smoke, disfigured and defaced by time, that it was 
very hard for one to trace the meaning of the devices, etc. Yet we could 
see upon some places, not completely disfigured and defaced, some very 
beautiful designs in light green, white and yellow, and on some of the 
walls we found traces of both male and female figures. On other parts of 



472 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

lliis IcMub wo louiul sonic of the walls covered with hieroglyphic 
iiisi-riplious. 

We visited another t(Miih called the " Soldiers' tomb," because of the 
rows of soldiers with inimeiise shields, pictured upon the south wall, but 
the tomb is truly the resting- place (or was"! of TcJ-ab the sim of Klicti ; 
and both Prof. Maspero and Mr. Griffith claimed that 7\[/-al> lived during 
the tenth dyiuisty, somewhere about u. o. 3000. // 'heir was Gink art 
thru f 

Tiic \icw iVoni this luoniitain is magnilicent. Lcpsitis claimed that 
it is the linest in lvg\pt. l'\ir my part I admit that it is a lovely view, 
but at the same time 1 think that there is equally as fine a one, if not 
superior, near Aswan, and also in the vicinity of Thebes there is some 
very beautiful scenery. We spent the greater portion of the day viewing 
these tondis among the calccrons rocks of this monntaiti, and in rambling 
aronud from one to the other wc saw pieces ot the mummied dead scat- 
tered in all directions, with shreils (^i mummy cloth, whitened bones, etc. 
We came down to where we had lelt our donkeys, miuinted them, and 
inside of an hour we were on boaril our lloating home, where we took our 
usual bath, smokcil a cigar, and after dinner we strolled up town with our 
fricuils to see what wc could o{ Asynt. 

Keturniug along the endiaukmcnt we passed a number of women 
slaves, perfectly nude, some washing, others filling their jars with water 
from the canal for household purposes. Some of these women were pos- 
sessed of very fine lignres, well developed, graeetul in their carriage, aiul 
did not .seem to notice our presence, but passed on their way with their 
jars posed tiinm their heads in a careless graceful uuinner. 0\\ our 
rctni-u to our boat wc tonud our crew ha\'iug a glorious time with their 
friends anil relatixes, whom they had in\ited to the " h^antasia." Their 
feast was o'er, their w^Mk was done, and lunv they were enjoviug them- 
selves to the fullest extent. \\'e st(^od and watched them tor quite 
awhile, then we all went into the cabin, and chatted with our friends. 
At last we parted tVom them, wishing them good night and " boii rorai^i-'^ 
amidst a blaze of light, for our sailors were burning fireworks, etc. 

After having parted tVom them we retired and slept soundly, and 
awoke the next nuirning to iind Salame with our coffee and toast, of 
which we soon disposed. We sent tor Hassan, in order to find out when 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 473 

lie would be able to leave, he informed us that he desired to lay in a good 
stock of provisions, etc., at this place, which would be impossible to obtain 
farther south, and I noticed that he was not particularly anxious to leave 
for a couple of days, and as the rest were agreeable to remain I was 
satisfied. I sat down all the morning writing letters, while our sailors 
were all busy cutting up their bread (which they had baked) into very thin 
slices, which they lay in the hot rays of the sun, until it was as dry as a 
crisp, after which they stored it away in their lockers for future use. 
You would scarce credit the amount of bread those fellows had baked, for 
their use, between here and Aswan. I asked Hassan how much he 
thought it would weigh ? He said that there was about two tons of it. 

That night Hassan informed me that he had supplied himself with 
all that he would need for our trip to Aswan and asked me if he could 
have the next day to visit some friends. I told him certainly, so the next 
morning, he started off dressed up like some great Arabian potentate or 
plenipotentiary. I spent part of the day in writing, the other in sight 
seeing. At night Hassan returned and when he had arrayed himself in 
his every-day costume, he told me that everything was in readiness on 
board and that if the wind should spring up, at any time during the 
night, he would start again on our journey, but we did not care to travel 
by night if we could possibly avoid it, because v/e desired to see the 
country in the immediate vicinity, consequently we agreed to wait until 
the next morning before we started. 

Ever since we came to this place there have been a persistent lot 
of fellows who were very desirous of selling us some of their pottery. 
Some of whom fairly took possession of our boat. They spread their 
wares all over the deck, as if it was their regular stall, or place for 
selling. We thought that if we bought a few things from them that 
they would pack up and leave ; but it seemed to have a contrary effect 
for they stayed until quite late. At length our sailors commenced 
talking to them and in very pronounced language ordered them off and 
they went, but I firmly believe that if their wares were not so fragile that 
they would have remained with us over night. 

After dinner we went for a stroll along the embankment and watched 
the people and talked of the decadence of Egyptian civilization, etc. 
We chatted and talked until after the sun had set and the stars shone 



474 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

forth from ou high, in refulgent glory, as we retraced our steps to our 
floating home, and long before our arrival, we heard our sailors singing 
their everlasting songs. We retired and slept through it all, and awoke 
the next morning to find a dead calm, so we waited until after breakfast 
before sending our men to the tow-line. Just as we were discussing that 
subject, a light air sprang up, our sails were loosed and we began to 
gather a little headway and found El-Hamra dropping astern. 

We now entered and passed through the most fertile part of the 
Nile Valley. The land lies low and the river banks are high, and are 
cut here and there by various canals for irrigation purposes, the waters 
of which flow out upon the land and Cause all things to grow liixuri- 
antly and in abundance. We now passed through fertile fields and 
meadows stored with sweet scented flowers, wherein were to be seen large 
flocks of sheep, and herds of buffaloes. Farther on we passed between 
gardens of cucumbers and various other vegetables and saw large fields of 
waving corn wherein could be hidden a squad of Lancers and their 
horses. We sailed b}^ farms and villages and saw clover and lupins 
growing higher than a man's head, and immense fields of blossoming 
beans whose fragrant flowers filled the air with their delicious perfume. 
Again we passed through fields of waving corn, whose bright green color 
extended as far as the eye can reach, soon to be guarded by the slinger 
who will sit nodding at his post and sometimes use his sling to scare away 
the birds from the ripening ears. Continuing on we observed fields of 
cane and upon the banks of the river itself, we saw large quantities of 
pumpkin and squash shining like gold in the rays of the noon day sun. 

This particular part of Egypt generally astonishes the tourist and 
traveller on account of the fertility of the soil and the wondrous growth 
of vegetation. Farms, towns, villages, Shadufs and Sakiyes, go drifting 
by and the changing scenery unfolds itself in one continuous panorama of 
charming vistas. The wind freshened and we went scudding along before 
a good stiff breeze and the scenery changed continuously. We passed 
high bluffs with here a farm and there a village, now a quarry, groves of 
palms, etc. Abu Tig fell astern, and was left behind as we went speeding 
along like a greyhound. Several Nile boats went lumbering along like 
an English collier heavily laden. Mishta was passed and now the Arabian 
hills began to draw closer to the river, and the strip of arable land upon 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 475 

the east bank grew narrower, and we saw the mounds of Talita off the 
southwest. Shekh Heridi was soon observed on the east bank of the river 
and Tahta quite a distance inland on the west. With our glasses we could 
see very plainly the tombs that were cut into the face of the mountain of 
Shekh Heridi. Next we saw the square pigeon towers of Passalon where 
the arable land begins to widen out again upon the east bank, and we 
left Maragah behind us, passing quite a large cultivated island. Here 
we saw several hogs lying upon the bank of the river among a lot of 
sweet peas and vines loaded with squash, etc., but we soon stirred them 
up with a few fine bird shot just to see them run to cover. Unfortunately 
the wind that served us so well began to fail, and died out, so we tied up 
for the night in the bend of the river at a place called Shendawwil the 
ancient Aphroditopolis. 

There is not much to be seen at this place, but after dinner we 
strolled up to the station and walked out along the track, and watched the 
glorious sunset and afterglow. How I wish, my dear brothers and read- 
ers, that 3'ou could have stood with me that evening and seen it as I did, 
for words cannot express the exquisite coloring of Nature's wardrobe, 
for she seemed to appear in her most charming hues in this wondrous 
valley of the Nile, the " Land of Egypt." As we sat under the awning 
that night, we noticed that the glorious stars seemed to have grown 
brighter. After a little while the golden moon came into view, and went 
sailing into grander heights from out the low refraction of the atmos- 
phere, near the horizon, when it shone with a truer, purer and more 
brilliant light, looking like a burnished silver orb in the unclouded 
starry vault above, and lighting up the earth below with sweet, soft tones 
of wondrous light. As we sat and pondered upon the sublimity and 
grandeur of nature, the hum of voices from the distance, and the lowing 
of cattle came to us ; the river was all aglow with a silver light, our sail- 
ors' songs were ended, and the wash of the river lingered with us, and as 
we retired it lulled us off to peaceful slumber. 

Salame aroused us and presented our usual cup of coffee and toast, 
after which we went on deck to find a dead calm, owing to which we were 
compelled to tow and punt, for we were all anxious to reach " hundred- 
gated Thebes." Our sailors started out and harnessed themselves to the 
tow-line, and as they tugged upon the rope they sang their songs, chatted 



476 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

and laughed at each other, and although the sun Avas high in the 
heavens, and burning hot, they capered along and sang and danced as if 
towing was a most delightful pastime. We strolled on ahead and made 
some sketches, and when the boat came up we went on board for our 
luncheon. 

The town of Suhag, situated about three hundred and ten miles from 
Cairo, was the next point of interest. It has a population of about nine 
thousand inhabitants, and is located close to the river. It has post, tele- 
graph and railway ofl&ces, as well as Hotels, Bazaars, Mosques, etc. Here 
is where the irrigating canal begins, that carries the waters of the Nile 
to Asyut, irrigating that fertile plain and at the same time reclaiming as 
much of the Lybian desert as possible ; it is called Mohat Sitliag. A 
little over four miles inland from this place is located the celebrated 
" White Monastery " or convent of Dcr-el-Abiad^ which is a ver}' inter- 
esting place to visit ; but the town of Suhag itself claims but very little 
of interest, consequently we pushed on to the steamboat and mail station 
Ekhfiiin. After turning the bend of the river, we found the merest strip 
of arable land on the east bank and the town of Ekhniin^ which place we 
should never have been enabled to reach, if it had not been for a favora- 
ble wind that sprung up just before we reached Suhag, and pushed us on 
at a seven-mile gait, relieving our men from a very hard-day's work of 
towing and punting our boat. We dined as usual, and while we were 
enjoying our meal we were tied up to the bank of the river. 

The town of Ekhniin is not far from the river, and it contains post 
and telegraph offices and a railway depot, etc. It is quite a town with a 
population of eighteen thousand inhabitants. It has a very fair bazaar 
and hotels, and a market-day is held here every Wednesday. At this 
place they manufacture those pretty check shawls that are worn so much 
by the "Sailors of the Nile." This town occupies the ancient site of 
KheJiimis or Panopolis, and Strabo informs that this place was once 
famous for its linen manufactories and workers in stone. Herodotus 
says the inhabitants of this town (Panopolis) were the only Egyptians 
who favored Greek customs. The dealers in antiquities here will furnish 
you, or in fact any one, all kinds of relics from a mummy to a handful 
of scarabs, and if they should not have what you require they will man- 
ufacture it for you, while you wait. 




»fc 



HALL OF COLUMNS, TEMPLE OF DENDERAH. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 477 

The next day we arose with the sun and found a dead calm, so after 
our men had partaken of their morning meal, they went oixt on the tow- 
path and we were soon crawling along southward up the stream towards 
Ba/iana, but about ten o'clock the wind came up fresh and fair, when our 
sails were loosed and away we went ploughing along like a steamboat. 

It was a delightful sensation to sit on deck under the awning, and 
watch the ever-changing scenery as we went scudding along the river, 
watching the towns and villages come and go. We found but a very 
scant strip of vegetation on the East bank, while on the West it stretches 
off for miles, with all kinds of vegetation growing abundantly. We now 
passed some islands that were cultivated, and arrived at, and left 
behind us the town of Girga. It is located close to the river, and is 
exposed to the wash of its waters. It was formerly the principal point of 
departure for Abydos, and the capital of Upper Egypt, but now it is 
simpl}? the chief town of the province. Twenty-five years ago the town 
had not been touched by the river, but to-day it is being washed away by 
every passing steamer and the regular inundations of the river itself. 

Passing more islands we verj^ soon run up under the bank at 
Baliana, where we stopped in order to visit Abydos. Baliana has both 
post and telegraph ofl&ces and a railway station. At this place we hired 
donkeys for our trip to Abydos, which we had looked forward to with a 
great deal of pleasure. It is located about eight miles off to the South- 
west of Baliana, and it would take full}- two hours to get there. Upon our 
arrival we sent Salame to engage donke\'-s for us as there was a " three- 
week " steamer due the following day, so we got our pick, and the next 
day arising, bright and early, we mcninted our little animals and rode 
off to visit Abydos and vicinity. The road led out through fertile 
fields and palm groves until we at length arrived at Abydos, which 
Mariette called " The cradle of the Egyptian Monarch." We rode 
directl}' to the great temple of (Seti, the father of Rameses II, j of the 
XIX dynasty which is the Memnomium of Strabo. 

The plan of this building is peculiar and many people are in doubt 
as to the meaning and object of its various parts. Like our Masonic 
temples and Scottish Rite Cathedrals, it is very difficult for the profane to 
determine the meaning and object of the various parts. To the initiate 
all is plain, and the meaning and object of everything is thoroughly 



478 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

understood, and the necessity of each part, in order to form the grand 
whole. We noticed on cntcriny this temple that the pjdon and walls, 
now in ruins, originally formed the oit/c/- court, which was to be plainly 
traced by the debris that clearly marked its ovitline. 

The next court is in a far better condition for the simple reason 
that part of these walls have been preserved, and this court leads up to 
the facade of the temple proper and the entrance to the first Half which is 
decorated with a row of twelve columns. The first Half itself, has a 
double row of columns, twelve in each row ; the entrance is through two 
doors, one in the centre and tlie other on the extreme right, the middle 
one appears from its extreme width to have been the principal or main 
entrance, while the one on the right is quite narrow. The carvings on 
these columns are very peculiar, but more especiall}' that portion which 
represents a kind of bat with human liands, in front of each there is a 
star with the hieroglyph Neb (Lord). This hall is long and narrow, but 
it must have been ver}- imposing when magnificently draped, and the 
grand preliminarj^ procession took place, preceding the regular initiatory 
services which were afterwards performed upon the aspiring Neophyte by 
the Master of the Holy House. To-day the roof has fallen down in nian}^ 
places, and it is only a question of time, when the lotus bud capitals will 
lie prone upon the earth, and be covered from sight b}- the dust of the 
dead past. 

The second Hall is very mucli larger in height, length, and breadth, 
three rows of colunnis adorn this place, the first two have lotus bud 
capitals, but the third row starts from a raised platform just bej-ond the 
others. Behind these, and on the same level, there is a series of seven 
vaulted chambers, with passages leading into them. Between the open- 
ing of each are seven niches " for statuary " (?) but. maj- not these seven 
niches have been for the Hierophant and officers to have sat in during 
the initiatory services? (I shall speak of this later on). Passing through 
the third chamber, from the north wall of the temple, we find otio-selves in 
a sniall hall, whose roof is supported b}' ten columns, on the north of 
this hall and to the right of the entrance are two sniall chambers, and on 
the south end is a smaller hall, whose roof is supported b}- four columns, 
the entrance to which is through an opening in the centre. At the end 
of this smaller hall on the south there are two smaller chambers. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 479 

From the second, and largest hall, with the three rows of columns, 
there are two openings, the first one that is nearest to the vaulted 
chambers, is a very interesting hall or room, whose roof is supported by- 
three columns, and on the west of this hall there are two oblong rooms 
whose vaulted ceilings are falling in to the room below. The other open- 
ing leads to a peristyle court that is adorned with six columns, and 
there are a great many other small halls and chambers off to the west of 
this court, but, it is here at the entrance to this hall, opposite the second 
and third row of tlie columns of the large hall, that is the most important 
part of the whole building because, on the right hand wall, on entering 
this ascending passage-way leading to the peristj-le hall or court, was 
discovered the celebrated " Tablet of Abydos ". 

Let me quote you from " Monuments of Upper Egypt " by Mariette 
Be}^, page 147. " By way of information, we may add, that it was in the 
temple of Sethi, that we discovered a chronological table of kings, more 
complete and in a better state of preservation than that whicli has 
enriched the collection of the British Museum. Sethi as king and Rame- 
ses still as a prince, are there represented standing ; the one offering the 
sacrifice of fire, the other reciting the sacred hymn. Before them as a 
synoptical diagram, are the cartouches of seventy-six kings (Sethi has 
included himself among the number), to whom this homage is paid, and 
it is not without a certain emotion that one reads at the head of the proud 
list the name of Menes, the ancient and venerable founder of Egyptian 
monarchy ". 

The discovery of this tablet has been of very great value to us, 
because it is an actual record of a list of Egypt's earliest kings, and 
recorded by one of Egypt's greatest rulers, who lived over thirty-four 
centuries ago. Of all the temples in Eg3'pt, there is to-da}' no better 
specimens of Egyptian art and architecture, of the Middle Empire, than 
are to be found in the decorations of the temple itself of Seti at Abydos. 
There is no tomb or temple throughout the " Land of Egypt " that can 
show finer work than the exquisite carvings chiselled upon the walls in 
the celebrated temple of Seti at this place. The tombs of Tih and Phah- 
hotep at Sakkarah do not show any more beautiful workmanship than 
is to be found here. I will not attempt to describe or explain the exquisite 
chisellings and decorations that have been inscribed upon the walls of the 



480 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

various halls, etc., of this most extraordinary temple of Seti, but, will 
refer my readers to Mariette, Rawlinson, Wilkinson and others for more 
information upon this famous mm. 

The temple of Rameses II is located a short distance to the north 
across a very high mound, and it, like that one of his father's, was dedi- 
cated to Osiris. It is somewhere about the same size of that of Seti's 
but it is in a much more dilapidated condition. Originally this 
temple was a most magnificent building, but to-day one can scarcely 
trace its outlines, for it has suffered far more from the ruthless hands 
of the destroyers, than it has from the all devastating hand of Time. 
From what information we can gain, andfrom our own personal observa- 
tions, we find that there was a large open court surrounded by Osiride 
figures, which opened into the temple proper, the entrance to which was 
from the East through a gateway of sculptured red granite. We cannot 
gather very much information from these ruins to-day, but there is one 
thing that we are positive about, and that is, that the temple of Rameses 
was built of very much richer material than that which was used in the 
construction of his fathers ; for we can plainly see in the temple of 
Rameses II, red and black granite and oriental alabaster lying all around 
among the debris. But in that one of Seti we find nothing excepting 
lime, and sandstone with which it was built. 

We visited the Necropolis of Abj'dos and found it especially inter- 
esting as it contained graves from the sixth dynast}^ down. We spent 
quite a time in examining these ancient relics of ancient Egyptian 
history. 

We retired early as we were all pretty well fagged out, and slept 
comfortably all through the night, and when Salame aroused me the 
next morning I felt refreshed from my long night's rest. After break- 
fast we went on shore with our guns and walked down the track with 
Salame following behind with a rifle. Our crew started out tracking, 
and by the time we arrived at the bend of the river we had bagged 
quite a lot of game. Here the river turns off sharp to the North of East, 
where we waited for the boat and got on board. 

From Bagura^ the Valley of the Nile and river runs nearly East 
and West as far as Keneh. We noticed now that the Dom-palm was 
more common and were to be seen in clusters, and were much finer 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 481 

looking than those farther north. At last we come to the island of 
Denderah which we passed and a landing was made on the West 
bank, just before reaching Kench^ which is located on the East bank. 
We tied up here because we could very easily walk to the temple of 
Denderah^ and not be bothered with donkeys or boys. About an hour 
after he had tied up to the bank, a glorious breeze sprung up and in our 
favor, after we had been tracking and punting, for three long days, try- 
ing to reach this place, where we were then moored. Such is luck. We 
retired early that night so. as to get an early start the following morning 
to explore the temple of Denderah and its ruins. 

In the morning, when Salame aroused us, the first rays of the sun had 
scattered the morning mist, and ushered in a glorious day and a pleasant 
breeze. We partook of our coffee and toast, and made preparations for 
an early start to the temple, so that after breakfast we were soon ready 
for our journey. 

The foundation of this celebrated temple was laid by Ptolemy XI 
{Auletes) and it was not fully completed, so far as its decorations are 
concerned, until the time of Nero. It is a very fine specimen of Grseco 
Egyptian Architecture, and shows upon its ovals the names of Augustus, 
Caligula, Tiberius, Domitian, Claudius, and Nero the very latest. This 
temple originally stood, like all other ancient Egyptian temples, in the 
centre of a vast enclosure generall}^ made of rough bricks, whose walls 
were very high and extraordinary thick. These walls were pierced with 
regular openings, or entrance gates, into the inclosure and when they 
were closed, all that happened within the inclosure, or the interior of the 
temple, covild neither be seen nor heard by the profane upon the out- 
side. This temple of Denderah was dedicated to Hatlior^ the Egyptian 
Venus and it stands very nearly as perfect to-day as when it left the 
hands of the builders and decorators, excepting those carvings and paint- 
ings which have been so mutilated by the order of the early Christian 
fathers. These vandals destroyed and desecrated all the temples and 
sacred places of these ancient people by throwing down, and disfiguring 
their beautiful statues, robbing their sanctuaries and beating away the 
faces of every figure they could reach, both inside and outside, of 
not only this most magnificent structure, (with very few exceptions) but 
every other temple in the valley of the Nile. 
31 



482 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Frank de Hess, D.D., iu "Explorations in Bible Lands," says in 
relation to the preservation of the beautiful and elaborate scenes pictured 
upon the walls, etc., of many of the temples in Egypt, etc. : " Nothing 
could be more beautiful than some of the scenes here pictured, and the 
preservation of the coloring after so many centuries is truly wonderful. 
This is partly due to the following circumstances : When Theodosius, 
Bishop of Alexandria, in his pious but mistaken zeal issued his cele- 
brated edict, A. D. 391, for the suppression of idolatry throughout Egypt, 
and ordered the temples to be divested of every vestige of idolatrous wor- 
ship, when many works of Art were destroyed, and it is painful to see 
how with pick and chisel many of these beautiful temples have been 
defaced. 

" Here, however {Medinet Habii)^ the bass-reliefs were so deeply cut 
in the hard granite, that instead of erasing the sculptures they merely 
plastered them over. This temple was afterwards converted into a 
Christian Church, as the frescoing clearly proves, and occasionally very 
ludicrous scenes are met with, where the stucco has partly fallen off. 
In one of the halls where the plastering has scaled off, may be seen a 
long procession of priests and princes, with Rameses III at their head, 
presenting their offerings and burning incense before Hatlior, under the 
symbol of a cow, and just above, where the frescoing still adheres to the 
wall, may be seen St. Peter with the key and crosier, raising his hand, as 
if in the act of pronouncing a benediction on the pagan worshippers." 

The entrance to the temple proper is from the east, and through a 
beautiful hypost3de hall fully fifty feet high, and one hundred and thirty- 
nine feet wide, adorned by twenty-four very fine columns, each of which 
has a capital of four Hathor heads, with cow's ears, surmounted by a 
house. The first or outer row of columns are connected by a series of 
balustrades, excepting between the two centre columns. Here was the 
gateway or entrance for the King and Hierophants who officiated in the 
ceremonies of initiation. While on each of the side walls there was a 
small door that was used no doubt by the priests and ofl&cials who assisted 
in the various ceremonies that took place within the Sancttnn Sanctortim. 

On entering into this beautiful temple, that is, coming in from out 
the bright sunlight outside, it will be some time before your eyes will 
become accustomed to the more subdued light of the interior, but by 







ENTRANCE TO TEMPLE OF MEDINET HABU. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 483 

degrees you will be enabled to dimly see here and there the outlines of 
hieroglyphic inscriptions, royal ovals and fantastic forms of all kinds, 
such as scarabei, winged globes, hawk-headed, cow-headed and Ibis-headed 
figures all around you, and a feeling of awe will steal over you, as you 
stand in darkness visible, and recognize the symbolism of the hoary civil- 
ization of a prehistoric age. 

All through this extraordinary temple are to be seen zodiacal emblems 
figures seated on thrones, kings and divinities performing their mystic 
rites and ceremonies. In passing from one hall to another, and examin- 
ing the various chambers, we get bewildered, as it were, in wandering 
around in the interior of this most extraordinary temple. Carvings of all 
kinds are to be seen all around us, the columns themselves are covered 
with divinities, in fact it would take me too long to describe them, conse- 
quently I will not attempt a description of these most extraordinary hiero- 
glyphic carvings, paintings, etc., but rather refer you to Mariette, Lepsius^ 
Maspero and others for their elucidation. 

These sculptures are as perfect in detail and they look as beautiful 
to-day as when first the artist completed his work, and the designer saw 
his thoughts expressed in the decorations upon the walls, columns and 
ceilings of this magnificent temple. The hand of time has not injured 
them a particle, and what injury they have received has been from the 
early Christians, who, as I have herein above stated, beat and battered 
down all the statues, and disfigured the faces of all the carvings they 
could reach, otherwise this temple would have been as perfect to-day as 
when its halls resounded to the voices of the Hierophant and officers 
performing their mystic rites and ceremonies in the early days of the 
Christian era. 

This is a most magnificent temple, its portico is majestic and 
impressive, with its massive columns, ponderous cornice and exquisitely 
carved frieze of kings, priests and warriors, in regular Egyptian Pana- 
thenaic procession, some of whom carry musical instruments and stand- 
ards, and above all, as if o'ershadowing with its Divine essence, an 
enormous, winged &^g, brooding as it were over the main entrance above 
the frieze. The decorations of the exterior and interior may seem very 
strange to many people who visit this temple, but each, and every one 
must admit that they are carved with masterly skill, and if you will 



484 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

examine the celebrated astronomical paintings upon the ceiling, the 
peculiar serpents in every variety of form, the massive columns or any- 
thing else, you will find them perfect specimens of what they were 
intended to represent. I especially desire to impress upon you this fact 
in relation to this temple. Although it is a most magnificent building, 
it does not represent the beauty of the early age of Ancient Egyptian 
Architectural design and beauty, and to the Art critics it only demon- 
strates the decadence of the Art under the Lagadi. 

We came away charmed and delighted with our trip and walked back 
to our home the Dahabiyeh, and as they were taking her across to Keneh, 
we took our bath and refreshed ourselves with a good cigar, up under the 
awning. Soon after we moored the boat at Keneh we strolled up town, 
looked through the bazaars, came back again and found dinner awaiting 
us, after which we all went up town to see the gawazi (dancing girls). 
These dances were disgusting, but I do not need to describe them here, 
for since the " World's Fair " in Chicago these dances are well known. 

The next morning we were fortunate enough to find a light air in 
our favor, so the sails were loosed, and we started off for Thebes, but 
only managed to get as far as Neqada, a small town on the West bank. 
The river scenery here was very fine, and the old town with its lofty pigeon 
towers, presented quite a quaint and picturesque appearance. Our whole 
talk was Thebes, and we talked of it until quite late. 

The next morning our sailors were towing and punting, and after 
breakfast Ave went on deck and talked of the grandeur of Thebes, her 
ancient tombs, temples and monuments, that we soon were to explore, 
fully realizing the stupendous glory that belonged to Egypt in her 
Golden Age. As we turned the bend of the river, and saw Qaviula a 
light breeze sprung up and we soon went spinning along over the waters. 
Very soon Hassan gave a shout and our whole crew burst forth in echo- 
ing yells Karnak! Luxor! etc. The pylons of Karnak came in sight and 
other points of interest. Our sailors struck up their songs, accompanied 
by drums, etc. The houses of the Consulates came in view with their 
flags fluttering in the breeze, the pigeon-towers of the village, Nile boats 
and Dahabi3^ehs dipping their flags, and firing their guns as we passed 
them. Our sails were furled and here we were at last, at the threshold 
of "Hundred-gated Thebes." 



JHasottic Ccacj)in(is— Hintitt Beggar— liio matt 

Catfjolirism. 



Slave to no sect, who takes no private road, 
But loohs through JSature up to Nature's God; 
pursues that chain which Hnhs th' immense design, 
Ofoins heaven and earth, and mortal and divine. 

— Pope. 



i!^6 



EGYPT. THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 487 



CHAPTER XXI. 

MASONIC TEACHINGS— HINDU BEGGAR— ROMAN CATHOLICISM. 

TjI VBRY man and brother who desires to thoroughly comprehend 

\ Masonry must be endowed with intellectual qualifications, in 

order to be enabled to understand and appreciate the grandeur and sub- 
limity of its teachings. Therefore, if he is not intellectually inclined, he 
will never rise above the foundation of the Symbolic Degrees, but will 
become a mere drone in the busy hive of Masonry instead of an active 
worker. He will assuredly go through the various ceremonies of Initia- 
tion, Passing and Raising, receiving the degree of a Master Mason ; but 
he will never become a Master, in very deed, until he has solved the 
various problems of its profound philosophies and understands the sub- 
lime teachings that permeate those ancient degrees — then, and theit only^ 
will he realize the true meaning of Brotherly Love, Relief and Truth. 
If he be true to his vows, he will be true to his fellow men, and will labor 
for the benefit and upbuilding of the human race by endeavoring to show 
them the Light of Truth, and help them on to a knowledge of the Law of 
Love and Righteousness. 

It is the duty of every Mason to labor earnestly and^ incessantly for 
the advancement of his brother, both mentally and morally ; teaching 
him that it is by the development of the intellectual qualifications that 
man begins to learn something about himself, and his own potential 
forces that are latent within. Because a man cannot read or write, that 
is no reason why he should not be enabled to learn to do so. 

The acquisition of knowledge is a gift to some, but every living man, 
with a well balanced brain, has the potentiality of acquiring knowledge 
and becoming wise, by deep thought and earnest study. He must learn 
to think for himself; for, as a man thinks in the depth of his heart, so he 
becomes, and it will not be long before he will begin to realize that the 
key-note to Wisdom is Meditation. Then will he be enabled to 



488 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

trample beneath his feet the snarling serpent of Ignorance, Falsehood 
and Intolerance, and help humanity by showing them the Light of 
Free Thought, Free Speech, and a profound veneration for tlie Supreme 
ArcJiitect of the Universe. 

Masonry tolerates all religions, and emphatically asserts that no man 
has the right to dictate to another what he shall or shall not believe, and 
claims that no one Religio?i possesses the ivhole of Truth^ and that every 
man has a perfect right to believe according to the dictates of his own con- 
science. Unless a man is allowed Freedom of Thought, he is not a Free 
man at all ; for if Man is possessed of Free Will, and is not permitted to 
exercise it by following his own reasoning faculties, where is his freedom ? 

Every Religion, and the so-called Truths of " Inspired " writings, 
depend entirely upon the testimony of Man himself. The evidences 
brought forward by him are produced as proofs of the Truth of his asser- 
tions. Masonry claims that all men have the right to judge of the Truth 
of the claims put forward, and to examine the proofs of the varions 
so-called "inspired" writings, and then to judge them, from a common 
sense reasoning standpoint. Then, if they stand the test of their inves- 
tigations, it is Truth for them. 

Man becomes what he Wills himself to be, and he can never get 
outside of the world that he makes for himself. Death cannot destroy 
the seeds that he has sown, for they all in good time ripen, and he 
receives the fruition thereof. No confession, no repentance, no sacrifice, 
or imploring of God, can ever change the mighty Law of Cause and 
Effect (Karma). This Law is a law of perfect Justice, knowing neither 
Love nor Hate, but moves to perfect Righteousness. A man's Faith 
belongs to himself alone, as much as his reasoning faculties, and his free- 
dom consists in being enabled to think and reason for himself, without 
let or hindrance, from any source at all whatever, exercising both to the 
uplifting of his Lower Manas (lower mind) to a higher plane of spiritual 
unfoldment, and thus dominating the Kaniic elements^ or animal propen- 
sities that are continually battling against his Higher Self. When he 
has accomplished this, subjugating the animal within, then he has con- 
quered himself, and is worthy of more honor than he who has conqnered 
kingdoms, for he has kept his " first vow," and has learned to subdue his 
passions, and in doing this he has improved himself in Masonry. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 489 

We find in " Morals and Dogmas," page 371 et seq.^ that " Symbols 
were the almost universal language of ancient theology. They were the 
most obvious method of instruction ; for, like nature herself, they 
addressed the understanding through the eye, and the most ancient 
expressions denoting communication of religious knowledge, signify 
ocular exhibition. The first teachers of mankind borrowed this method of 
instruction, and it comprised an endless store of pregnant hieroglyphics. 

" The Ancient Sages, both barbarian and Greek, involved their 
meaning in similar indirections and enigmas ; their lessons were con- 
veyed either in visible symbols, or in those ' parables, and dark sayings 
of old ' which the Israelites considered it a sacred duty to hand down 
unchanged to successive generations. The explanatory tokens employed 
by man, whether emblematical objects or actions, symbols or mystic 
ceremonies, were like the mystic signs and portents either in dreams or 
by the wayside, supposed to be significant of the intentions of the Gods ; 
both required the aid of anxious thought and skilful interpretation. It 
was only by a correct appreciation of analogous problems of nature, that 
the will of Heaven could be understood by the Diviner, or the lessons of 
Wisdom become manifest to the Sage. 

" The Mysteries were a series of symbols ; a:nd what was spoken there 
consisted wholly of accessory explanations of the act or image ; sacred 
commentaries, explanatory of established symbols ; with little of those 
independent traditions embodying physical or moral speculation, in which 
the elements or planets were the actors, and the creation and revolutions 
of the world were intermingled with recollections of ancient events : and 
3'et with so much of that also, that nature became her own expositor 
through the medium of an arbitrary symbolical instruction, and the 
ancient views of the relation between the human and divine received 
dramatic forms. 

",. " There has ever been an intimate alliance between the two systems, 

Y 
the symbolic and the philosophical, in all the allegories of the monu- 
ments, of all ages, in the symbolic writings of the priests of all nations, in 
the ritiials of all secret and mysterious societies ; there has been a con- 
stant series, an invariable uniformity of principles, which comes from an 
aggregate, vast, imposing and true, composed of parts that fit harmoni- 
ously only' there. 



490 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

" Symbolical instruction is recommended by the constant and uniform 
usage of antiquity ; and it has retained its influence throughout all ages, 
as a system of mysterious communication. The Deity, in his revelation 
to man, adopted the use of material images for the purpose of enforcing 
sublime truths, and Christ taught by symbols and parables. 

" All the ideas of the Priests of Hindostan, Persia, Syria, Arabia, 
Chaldea and Phoenicia were known to the Egyptian Priests. The 
rational Indian Philosophy, after penetrating Persia and Chaldea, gave 
birth to the Egyptian Mysteries. We find that the use of Hieroglyphics 
was preceded in Egypt by that of the easily understood symbols and 
figures from the mineral, animal and vegetable kingdoms used by the 
Indians, Persians, and Chaldeans to express their thoughts ; and 
in this primitive philosophy was the basis of the modern philosophy of 
Pythagoras and Plato. 

" All the philosophers and legislators that made Antiquity illustrious 
were the pupils of the initiation ; and all the beneficent modifications, in 
the religions of the different peoples instructed by them, were owing to 
their institution and extension of the Mysteries. In the chaos of popular 
superstition's those mysteries alone kept man from lapsing into absolute 
brutishness. Zoroaster and Confucius drew their doctrines from the 
mysteries that emanated from the Ancient Wisdom. Clemens, of Alex- 
andria, speaking of the Great Mysteries, says : ' Here ends all instruc- 
tion. Nature and all things are seen and known.' Had moral truths 
alone been taught the Initiate, the mysteries could never have deserved 
or received the magnificent eulogiums of the most enlightened men of 
Antiquity — of Pindar, Plutarch, Isocrates, Diodorus, Plato, Euripides, 
Socrates, Aristophanes, Cicero, Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius, and others ; — 
philosophers hostile to the Sacerdotal Spirit, or historians devoted to the 
investigation of Truth. No : all the sciences were taught there ; and 
those oral or written traditions briefly communicated, which reached back 
to the first age of the world." 

Masonry, lineal descendent of those Ancient Mysteries, yields her 
glorious Truths to the earnest student who meditates upon the sublime 
and profound syrabology of our most illustrious Fraternity, and to all 
those who diligently search, or seek, they will most assuredly find. But 
it must be thoroughly understood, that it will be very difificult to unveil 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 491 

the secrets of her profound philosophies. They are only to be obtained 
by great mental exertion, but once they are unveiled, and comprehended, 
they will never be forgotten ; because what has been acquired through 
deep, earnest study, and a great mental exertion, is more easily remem- 
bered, and is generally more highly prized. Our own beloved Scottish 
Rite, like the Greater Mysteries, unfolds to her postulants, the true 
meaning of her profound symbology, so that they may be enabled to see 
the Light of Truth, in all its variant phases. Having acquired Know- 
ledge and Wisdom, they should not be content with simply keeping it 
hid within their own heart, and be indifferent to the wants and needs of 
their fellow man and brother; but should ever strive to assist them along 
these lines of thought, so that they may be enabled to attain to the sub- 
lime Truths of the " Holy Doctrine. " 

In order that we may be enabled to come to a thorough understand- 
ing of Divine Wisdom^ we must light within our own heart the Lamp of 
Reason^ and wander studiously among the rich field of Religion, Science 
and Philosophy, wherein will be found not only the " Holy Doctrine '' 
but the Royal Secret. A knowledge of the one will unfold the other to 
all who earnestly desire the Truth in all its sublimity and grandeur. 
Reason and Meditation are rays of Divine Ideation which illuminates our 
mind and opens up to our consciousness Divine revelations. 

In order that you, my dear readers and Brothers, may better under- 
stand my meaning let me say : When a man sits within the Light of 
Reason and Meditates upon the various problems of Religion, Science or 
Philosophy, no matter how difficult they may be to solve and understand, 
under the Light of Meditation, by concentrating his thoughts upon them 
he sets in vibration thought forces, that go out into the infinitude of 
space and into Divine Ideation, that return to him, bringing back with 
them a reflex action from the Divine Mind that illuminates his inner 
vision and the problem is solved. No matter what the subject or problem 
may be, or how difficult to understand. Concentration of the Mind will 
help us on to the solution of the greatest discoveries in all fields of 
investigation. 

The law of vibration can be very easily proven to your entire satis- 
faction, and vibratory forces can be very clearly demonstrated, so that 
you may have ocular proof of the existence of there. Take a guitar, for 



492 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

instance, and tune it to a piano, and after they are in accord, set fhe 
guitar at the far end of a large room, or hall, then have some one strike 
the key note upon the piano, by which it was tuned, and we shall not 
only see the strings move, but hear them vibrate in harmony or unison, as 
the notes are struck upon the larger instrument. In the same manner 
in Concentration ; the Mind of Man is a part of the Divine Mind and 
when, by profound Meditation and Concentration, we set up vibrations 
that pass out into the infinitude of space, they will come back to us 
illuminated by Divine Ideation, and thus we are enabled to discover the 
Truth for which we are searching, or solve the problem that we have been 
studying. Here we begin to see and understand that vibratory forces in 
Thought or Act are powerful factors for Good or Evil. We shall also 
realize that Thoughts are Tilings, that Thoughts are Personal Entities, and 
in knowing this to be a fact, we can better understand what is meant by 
the statement that " Curses like chickens come home to roostT 

"You can never tell what your thoughts will do, 
111 bringing j-ou hate or love ; 
For thoughts are things, and their airy wings 
Are swifter than carrier doves. 

" They follow the law of the universe. 
Each thing must create its kind ; 
And they speed o'er the track, to bring j'ou back 
Whatever went out from your mind." 

The symbol of the Rose Croix is the pelican, tearing open its breast, 
in order to feed its young with its heart's blood, thus demonstrating to 
our Brothers of the Scottish Rite, Compassion and Love for our fellow 
Man, and teaches us that we should ever labor in the interest of 
humanity, by sacrificing ourselves, if need be, in a cause that all good, 
and true men should advocate : Ereedom of Thought, Ereedom of Speech 
and Equal rights to Alan throughout the u'orld universal. When Christ 
was asked by the lawyer, " Master, which is the great commandment in 
the law ? " Christ answered and said, " Love the Lord thy God with all 

thy heart This is the first and great commandment. . . . Thou 

shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." Matthew 22 : 37-39. 

How many are there who follow this advice? The great majority of 
people simply live for themselves alone, believing that the gratification 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 493 

of the animal propensities is the height of human happiness. They are 
perfectly willing that their neighbor should sacrifice all his desires for 
either him or them, and consider it nothing but right and proper for him 
to do so, but they will never give anything in return for the sacrifice. 
Thus they demonstrate their selfishness. The love that the great 
majority of mankind has at heart, is the love of Self. The fulfilment of 
the desires for their own good and selfish purposes, they consider to be 
true happiness. They will eventually find, however, that true happiness 
can never be attained b}^ seeking it for ourselves alone, but only in sacri- 
ficing our own desires for the benefit of our fellow man, and in the 
practice of selflessness. It is far better to give than to receive. There- 
fore in seeking the happiness of others, doing good to all men, because we 
know it to be otir duty, asking nothing nor expecting atiything iti return^ 
is really and truly the Law of Love ; which will lead us on to perfect 
bliss. 

The man who has during the whole course of his life endeavored to 
accumulate vast wealth, and miser-like, hoards it away, gloating over 
untold sums of gold and precious gems, does not realize that not one 
pennyweight of it belongs to him in reality ; he has acquired it most cer- 
tainly, but only as a loan, as it were, and just as he does with it, so will 
he reap reward or punishment. He cannot carry away with him beyond 
the grave one hair's weight of it, but the good that he has done with it, 
in deeds of charity and loving kindness, will be recorded and he will find, 
that that which he hath given away, that he will carry with him. The 
height of human happiness consists in man being enabled to truthfully 
say : I want nothing for myself alone in this world, and I live for the 
express purpose of helping my fellow man. 

Masonry has ever labored to give humanity Freedom of Thought, 
Freedom of Speech, and a Free government, for the people and b}^ the 
people, and all those who enter into the Hol}^ House of the Temple should 
ever work to free their fellow man from the bonds of imposture and priestly 
arrogance. Man's birthright is freedom, but he has been enslaved b}' his 
fellow man. 

Every Scottish Rite Mason who has the good of the fraternity at 
heart is a Priest of Trnth, of Toleration, of Philosophy, and of Rational 
Liberty, and it is therefore his bounden Duty, First: to take Tyranny, 



494 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Injustice^ and Usurpation by the throat, and by the assistance of his 
Brothers Free the Human Race^ irrespective of Creed, Caste or Color, from 
all who would enslave it. Second : to Free his own country from Despots 
and Despotism and thus give to the people, both temporal and spiritual 
Freedom, which includes all the inalienable rights of Man. 

To ever labor for the upbuilding of the human race is the Duty of 
every true Man and Mason. They know full well that the greatest of all 
gifts to Man is ManJwod. They also know that true Manhood can never 
be found in the mumbling chants and invocations of Romish Priests, or 
Sectarianism, and in religious Dogmas or Creeds. Our beloved Scottish 
Rite teaches us that our main object and Duty in life is for us to do our 
duty to all men, even to the neglect of our own personal comfort, ever and 
always striving to make others happy, because it is right for each and 
every man to do his Dut}^ to all men, without hope of fee, or reward. 
Happiness will surely follow the man who performs his duty. At the 
same time we must ever remember that self-gratification should never be 
the incentive to do good, but to do it because it is right for us to do so. 
If Man would only practice Love and good fellowship to all men, and 
follow the -teachings of our glorious Fraternity, Mankind would be far 
happier and this world would be a veritable paradise. 

God commands us to do good, and Altruism has ever been taught by 
all the great Reformers, long centuries before our present Christian era. 
It is still taught and preached, but it is never or seldom CMer practiced. 
This fact reminds me of an incident that happened to me in India, while 
travelling through that country a few years ago. 

I was going from Dinapoor to Allahabad for the purpose of attending 
a celebrated Mela, that was to be held at the confluence of the Jumna with 
the Ganges, when I overtook a man who carried a beggar's bowl and staff. 
He seemed to be begging his way apparently from town to town. As I 
approached the man, I looked at him closely, and noticed that he was quite 
an athletic looking fellow, standing full}' six feet two inches tall, with a 
very fine phrenological development, and from his expressive features I 
judged him to be a Frenchman, and said to him, in that language, ete vous 
Francaise? He replied to me in Italian, saying, " No, sir!" I answered 
him in that language, telling him that I could speak Italian, when he said 
to me in good plain English : " I am neither French nor Italian, sir ; and 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 495 

why do you stop me upon the roadside and ask such questions ? Is there 
not room for you and me to pass, or is it customary in the country from 
which you come to accost the casual pedestrian and ask him all manner 
of questions ?" 

To say the least, I was very much surprised, and said to him : " No 
sir; it is certainly not customary to do so in any country I know, but 
being struck by your personal appearance, and seeing you in beggar's 
garb, I thought possibly that I could be of some assistance to you," at 
the same time, pulling out my purse in order to give him a few rupees, 
saying, " I have the greatest compassion for the poor in particular, and 
mankind in general. Seeing you begging your way along the road I 
wanted to help you." I then offered him some money, when he smiled 
upon me and said : " No, my dear sir, I have no need for money, these 
good people (pointing along the road) give me all that I need to eat and 
drink." I said : " That no doubt is quite true, your food is assured, but 
what about your sleeping at night, we all must rest." He answered me : 
" A neighboring tree furnishes me all the shelter that I need, and the 
glorious stellar vault above enwraps me in a Divine essence, and I sleep 
the refreshing sleep of childhood." I said to him : " Why do you not go 
to our Missionaries ? They would help you and give you more comfort- 
able clothing than the yellow ' copra ' that you are wearing, besides you 
surely believe in the teachings of Christ, do you not ?" 

He smiled upon me again and said, " Certainly, who is there that 
does not believe in those teachings of the Man of Nazareth ; but let me 
tell you, my dear sir, that there is not one word that the Lowly Nazarene 
preached, and practiced, that has not been taught and acted upon by all 
the Masters of every age, and each, and every one of those glorious 
Truths are embodied in all religions. They have been preached and 
practiced by all the Great Reformers long ages before your Christ was 
ever born or dreamed of, when He came down the winding way that led 
to Jerusalem, in order to take possession of His kingcSm, riding bare- 
backed upon an Ass, with the glorious sunlight from heaven streaming 
down upon His bared head, light, that was free to all men. The people 
came flocking out from the City Gates, in order to welcome this so-called 
son of God, strewing palm leaves before Him, and shouting hosanna to 
the meek and lowly Nazarene, who in the humbleness of heart and 



496 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

humility of soul rode barefooted and bareheaded upon an Ass to preach 
Love and Compassion to all men. The people fell prone upon the earth 
in order to kiss the very hoof marks of the ass upon which He rode, 
because He taught Love in all its sublimity and grandeur, and He prac- 
ticed what He preached. Compassion and Love to all Men. 

" NoW about the Missionaries that you ask me to go to. Do you 
think that they understand the practice of se/Jiessness as the Master 
taught it ? — I tell 3'ou No ! they do not. The love that they have, is not 
so much for their fellow man, as you imagine, and the love that they have 
at heart, is the love of women, wine, fine clothes, fast horses, and above 
all, plenty of money, in order to gratifytheir animal passional nature. 
When they drive out in their carriages their runners who go before 
shout out in their language, ' Look out, the Great Man is coming ! ' 
These so-called teachers of the Lowl}^ Nazarene would not walk ten rods 
barefooted to help any man unless they were well paid for doing so, or 
gained the credit of being an exception to the general rule." 

Long after I had parted from him I thought that there was a great 
measure of Truth in what he had told me. I knew that the religious 
teaching of all the great Moral Reformers, long ages before the Christian 
Era, was Love and Compassion, and that they were not only preached 
but practiced. 

The Religion of Buddha is full of the most beautiful and unselfish 
acts that have ever been taught in any age, for instance, " Be y& all of 
one mind, having compassion one of another; love as brethren; be pitiful; 
be courteous; not rendering evil for evil, or railing for railing; but con- 
trawise, blessing." Again the teachings of Chrishna show a most pro- 
found depth of thought, that equals anything that is credited to Jesus 
Christ, for instance: "Above all things, cultivate love for j'our neighbor." 
" When you die ^-ou leave 3-our worldh- v.ealth behind you, but your 
virtue and vices follow after you." " Do good for its own sake, and 
expect not your reward for it on earth." See Cliapter XI]' of tins work. 

The Moral teachings of Christianity are sublimely grand, and beau- 
tiful, but they were preached and practiced centuries before the so-called, 
Light of the New Dispensation ; and they are not new for they each and 
all originated in the Pagan philosophies of a prehistoric age. Our 
modern Ethics are most beautiful, and when we hear them read to us, 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 497 

they thrill us to the very centre of our being ; but what are mere words 
without action. 

H. P. Blavatsky says in the Key to Thcosophy^ page 238, "Self-sac- 
rifice for practical good to save many or several people, Theosophy holds 
as far higher than self-abnegation for a sectarian idea, such as that of 
' Saving the heathen from dam7tation^ for instance : — In our opinion, 
Father Damien, the young man of thirty who offered his whole life in 
sacrifice for the benefit and alleviation of the sufferings of the lepers of 
MoLOKAi, and who went to live for eighteen years alone with them, to 
finally catch the loathsome disease and die, he has not died in vain. He 
has given relief, and relative happiness to thousands of miserable 
wretches. He has brought to them consolation, mental and ph3'sical. 
He threw a streak of light into the black and dreary night of existence, 
the hopelessness of which is unparalleled in the records of human suffer- 
ing. He was a trtie Theosophist^ and his memory will live for ever in our 
annals. In our sight this poor Belgian priest stands immeasurably 
higher than — for instance- — all those sincere but vainglorious fools, the 
Missionaries who have sacrified their lives in the South Sea Islands, or 
China. What good have they done? They went in one case to those 
who are not ripe for any truth ; and in the other to a nation whose sys- 
tems of religious philosoph}^ are as grand as any, if only the men who 
have them would live up to the standard of Confucius, and their other 
sages. And they died victims of irresponsible cannibals and savages, 
and of popular fanaticism and hatred. Whereas, by going to the slums 
of Whitechapel, or some other such locality of those that stagnate right 
under the blazing sun of our civilization, full of Christian savages, and 
mental lepers, they might have done real good, and preserved their lives 
for a better and a worthier cause." In all of which I ,do most heartily 
concur. 

We are certainly in great need of Missionaries in all our large cities, 
to work among many of the people, with whom we come in contact, every 
day of our lives. In every part of the civilized world, are to be found 
men and women, who are mere beasts of burden, who toil and live in 
squalor, misery, and ignorance. Women who are insensible to shame, 
and w^ho revel in the luxuries that have been purchased by the loss of 
everything that women hold to be the brightest jewel in the crown of 
32 



498 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

true womanhood. Is there not a rich field for Missionary work at the 
very thresholds of our own homes ? I have stated in a previous chapter 
of /h's work^ that the world was never more full of open and unblushing 
vice than it is to-day. Our churches and ministers are unable to cope 
with it ; they do not seem to understand the cause, and much less the 
remedy. 

How often I have heard people laugh and scoff at the attempted 
harmony of the bands of the " Salvation Army." I tell you my dear 
Brothers, those people are doing a noble work. They may not furnisli a 
grand rythmic harmony of sound, but they are most assuredly doing 
both grand and noble work in their efforts to raise the fallen and disso- 
lute, to a liigher plane of morality. In siich work there is a wide, wide 
field for our Missionaries, and if they would only try to save our own 
heathen, who wander around the very thresholds of our own homes, they 
would be doing far more good than sacrificing their lives, and being 
barbecued upon a stack of their own tracts and bibles, and thus fur- 
nishing a rare feast to a lot of savages unable to understand either 
tbem or their teachings. They are being brutally murdered by the 
followers of Confucius, whose ethics are as beautiful and grand as our 
own code if properly understood. 

To help our fellow man and to do the most good for the upbuilding 
of the human family, does not consist in losing our own lives, effecting 
no good results by the sacrifice ; but to help our fellow man by sacrificing 
our own personal comfort and desires, to give to him from our own 
earnings and help him on to a higher plane of spiritual unfoldment, so 
that he may come to an understanding of himself is the duty that we 
owe to all men. We should ever remember, that wise aphorism of 
Epictetus " Be not diverted from your duty, by any idle reflections the silly 
world may make itponyoit^ for their censures are not in your power, and 
consequently should not be any part of your concern." 

Do good to all men, and try to recognize in the whole human race 
one great family of which you yourself are a part. Every true Knight 
Kadosh labors for the benefit of his fellow man and Brother in order to 
improve their condition both Mentally and Morally, teaching them never 
to submit to Oppression, Injustice and Usurpation; and whose watch- 
words are — Humility, Patience and Self-denial. They are always willing 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 499 

to hazard their lives for the welfare of their country, the interest of 
humanity, and to sacrifice their lives for their fellow man, if humanity 
may be benefited thereby. 

The dogma of Masonry is that of Zarathustra and Hermes ; its Law 
is progressive Initiation ; its principles, Equality, regulated by Hierarchy 
and universal Fraternity. It is the continuation of the Greater Mys- 
teries, and of the School of Alexandria, and it is the heir of all the 
ancient Initiations. It is the depository of the secrets of the Apocalypse 
and the Sohar. It is the conserver and preserver of the Wisdom pertain- 
ing to the Secret Doctrine. The object of its worship is Truth which is 
represented in our Lodges, Chapters, Councils and Consistories, by the 
Light that it dispenses. 

It antagonizes no creed, but tolerates all, and professes the teachings 
of the Ancient Wisdom^ and claims that " There is no Religion higher 
THAN Truth." It seeks Truth alone and strives to lead by Degrees all 
intellects to Reason, allowing ever}' Brother to profess and practice any 
Religion or Philosophy that his conscience may dictate ; or none if it be 
preferable to him, only asking that they believe in the Supreme Archi- 
tect of the Universe. It is a Philanthropic and Scientific Fraternity that 
believes in and teaches the Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood of 
Man, and that every man should have the right to Freedom of Thought^ 
Freedom of Speech and Freedom of Conscience. 

Through every age of the world's history, Masonry has ever been 
the Champion of the Rights of People, endeavoring to teach, practice, 
and disseminate a knowledge of Truth, among all men, throughotit the 
world universal, ever striving to free them from their own animal pas- 
sional nature and to free them from Ignorance, Bigotry, Intolerance, 
and Mental and Spiritual Slavery. It stands to-day at tlje head of human 
affairs, and will most assuredly guide and direct us safely on through the 
approaching Crisis to the inalienable Rights of the People — Liberty of 
Thought, Freedom of Conscience and Free Government for the People 
and by the People. 

There has never been a time when our illustrious Fraternity conspired 
against the Government to which it owed due and lawful obedience, and 
it is always ready and willing to draw its sword in defence of the down- 
trodden aud oppressed of every country. We have a bitter, vindictive, 



500 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

and relentless foe in Jesuitry, which would if it were possible, throw the 
world back again into the same conditions as when the fires flamed 
throughout the so-called civilized w^orld in Aiiio da fes of the Romish 
Church, who have ever and always been the advocate, and upholder of the 
'''' Nicolaitan " theory — the rule of the priesthood over the People. Con- 
sequently she is the bitter foe of all that tends to enlighten and educate 
the masses, such as Free Secular Schools, a free press, freedom of thought 
and opinion, by which I mean — Religious Freedom, and as I have pre- 
viously stated — A Free Government for the People and by the People. 

It behooves every true Man and Mason to stand upon his guard 
against the interference of Jesuitry with our Secular Free Schools, con- 
ducted for the express purpose of instructing our children in pure secular 
learning. They may obtain herein a thorough and complete knowledge 
of reading, Avriting, and speaking the Knglish language correctly, also arith- 
metic, with the higher branches of mathematics, as well as a thorough 
comprehension of History, Geography, etc. All of which is actually 
necessary not only for the future benefit of our American citizen, in par- 
ticular, but for our beloved country in general, that her citizens should 
be men of education, intelligence and refinement. Men who are free from 
all bigotry, and intolerance of Creed and Dogmas such as pertain to the 
Romish Church, and her Jesuitical Bigots. 

There has been much comment about " Godless Schools " promulgated 
most assuredly by our bitter foes the Romish Church and the Jesuits ; 
but m}' dear Friends and Brothers, it is the Duty of our Country to teach 
the Known and not the Unknown. Ever}' intellectual man will most 
assuredly come to an understanding of the Supreme Architect of the 
Universe, if he be permitted to light the lamp of his own reasoning 
faculties, and follow the dictates of his own conscience, by thinking for 
himself He will never under any circumstance allow either Jesuit 
or Romish priests to attempt to compel him to believe, as he or they may 
desire. May the Good God preserve our Secular Schools and Free 
Institutions from the ruthless hands of what Pope Pius VII called his 
" Sacred Militia '' — the Jesuists. 

They are ever and always working and plotting to enter the thin end 
of the wedge into our Free Secular Schools, and destroy them. Our 
Laws and Constitution would be torn down and trampled beneath the feet 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 501 

of these bigoted and intolerant Jesuits, and a repetition of the horrors of 
the Inquisition would occur as it did during the ^^ Dark Ages'''' and the- 
Eve of Saint Bartholomew would be repeated, not only in our own coun- 
try, but in ever}' other that was not thoroughly under the dominion of 
the Romish Church. 

There was quite a furore among the Jesuits and priests of the Romish 
Church, when the Prince of Wales succeeded his mother good Queen 
Victoria, and was crowned King of England, on account of the Oath 
that was taken by him at the time. In order that you may be enabled to 
thoroughl}' understand the nature of this Oath I will quote you from 
" Fifty Years of Masonry in California," Vol. II, page 537. 

The following is the Coronation Oath, taken in Section VII of the 
Order of Coronation Ceremonies : " The sermon being ended, and his 
Majesty having in the presence of the two Houses of Parliament made 
and signed the Declaration, the Archbishop goeth to the King, and stand- 
ing before him administers the Coronation Oath, iirst asking the King,. 
' Sir, is 3' our Majesty willing to take the Oath ? ' And the King answer- 
ing, 'I am willing.' The Archbishop niinistereth these questions, and 
the King, having a copy of the printed Form and Order of the Corona- 
tion Services in his hands, answers each question severally as follows : 
' Archbishop. — Will 3'ou solemnlj^ promise and swear to govern the people 
of the United Kingdom of Great Britain, and Ireland, and the dominions 
thereto belonging, according to the Statutes in Parliament agreed on, and 
the respective Laws and customs of the same ? King. — I solemnly prom- 
ise so to do. Archbishop. — Will you to the utmost of your power, main- 
tain the laws of God, the true profession of the Gospel and the Protestant 
Reformed Religion established by Law ? And will 3'ou maintain inviolably 
the Settlement of the United Church of England and Ireland, and the 
doctrine, worship, discipline, and government thereof, as by law established 
within England and Ireland, and the territories thereunto belonging? 
And will you preserve unto the bishops and clergy of England and 
Ireland, and to the churches there committed to their charge, all such 
rights and privileges as by law do or shall appertain to them or any of 
them ? King. — All this I promise to do. 

" Then the King arising out of his chair, supported as before, and 
assisted by the Lord Great Chamberlain, the Sword of State being carried 



502 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

before liim, shall go to the altar, and there, being uncovered, make his 
solemn oath in the sight of all the people to observe the premises ; lay- 
ing his right hand upon the Holy Gospel in the Great Bible, which was 
carried before him in the procession, and is now brought from the altar by 
the Archbishop and tendered to him as he kneels upon the steps, saying 
these words : King — ' The things which I have here before promised I 
will perform and keep. So help me, GoD.' Then the King kisseth the 
book and signeth the Oath." 

Now let us examine the form of oath taken by the Jesuits, and which 
was published by " The Standard " of London, England, March 20th, 
1901, and is as follows: "I, A. B., now in the presence of Almighty 
God, the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Blessed Michael, the Blessed St. John 
the Baptist, the Holy Apostles St. Peter and St. Paul, and all the Saints 
and the Sacred Hosts of Heaven, and to you ni}^ Ghostly Father, do 
declare from ni}' heart, without mental reservation, that His Holiness 
Pope Leo is Christ's Vicar General, and is the true and only Head of the 
Catholic or Universal Church throughout the earth, and that, b}^ the 
virtue of the keys of binding and losing given to His Holiness by my 
Saviour Jesus Christ, he hath power to depose heretical Kings, Princes, 
States, Commonwealths and Governments, all being illegal without his 
Sacred Confirmation, and that thej^ may be safel}^ destroyed. Therefore, 
to the utmost of my power, I shall and will defend this doctrine, and 
His Holiness' rights and customs against all usurpers, especially against 
the new pretended authority, and the Church of England and all adher- 
ents in regard that they and she be usurpal and heretical, opposing the 
Sacred Mother Church of Rome. I do renounce and disown any allegi- 
ance as due to any heretical King, Prince, or State named Protestant, or 
obedience to an}^ of their inferior Magistrates or officers. 

" I do further declare the doctrine of the Chtirch of England, of the 
Calvinists, Huguenots, and of others of the name Protestant to be damna- 
ble, and they themselves are damned and to be damned that will not for- 
sake the same. I do further declare that I will help, assist and advise all 
or au}^ of His Holiness' agents in any place in which I shall be, in 
England, Scotland and Ireland, or in any other territory or Kingdom I 
shall come to, and do my utmost to extirpate the heretical Protestant 
doctrine, and to destroy all their pretended power, legal or otherwise. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 503 

" I do further promise and declare that notwithstanding I am dis- 
pensed to assume any religion heretical for propogating of the Mother 
Church's interest, to keep secret and private all her agents' counsels from 
time to time as they interest me, and not to divulge, directly or indirectly 
by word, writing, or circumstances whatsoever, but to execute all what 
shall be proposed, given in charge, or discovered unto me, by you my 
Ghostly Father. All of which I, A. B., do swear by the Blessed Trinity 
and Blessed Sacrament, which I now am to receive, and on ui}- part to 
keep inviolabl}-, and do call the Heavenl}^ and glorious Host of Heaven 
to witness these my real intentions, and to keep this, my Oath. In 
testimony hereof I take this hol}^ and blessed Sacrament of the Eucharist, 

and witness the same further with m}^ hand and seal this ■ day , 

Ann Dom., etc." 

Now, if we compare the two Oaths, I am certain that you will agree 
with me that the English Protestants have far more complaint against 
the Romish Church and the black soldiers of Loyola (the Jesuits) than 
the Church of Rome and her " Sacred Militia " have against Protestants 
and the Oath of King Edward of England and her dependencies. 

Papal Rome is the bitter foe of all English speaking people who are 
not under her control, and if she can b}^ any means disrupt the Anglo- 
Saxon Race, her aim will be accomplished. To-day her main object is to 
stir up strife and discord between England and America and thus destroy 
both if possible, then upon the ruins of two of the grandest nations of the 
earth, she would raise her standards and rule the world with a rod of iron. 
Her long war against humanit}' and human progress, Science and civili- 
zation, if successful, would be smothered in the smoke and flame of Auto 
da Fes^ and Free Masonry would be stamped out of existence by those 
Ruthless and Intolerant Bigots, the Jesuits and Catholic priests. 

I now quote you from General Albert Pike's answer to the letter of 
Pope Leo XIII, known as the letter, " Humanum Genus " : " Thanks be 
unto the God of Hosts, from whom all glories are ! Free Masonry is 
mightier than the Church of Rome ; for it possesses the invincible might 
of the Spirit of the Age and of the convictions of Humanity ; and it will 
continue to grow in strength and greatness, while that Church, in love 
with and doting upon its eld traditions, and incapable of learning any- 
thing, will continue to decay. The palsied hand of the Papacy is too 



504 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

feeble to arrest the march of human progress. It cannot bring back the 
obsolete doctrine that Kings reign by divine right. In vain it will 
preach new Crusades against Free Masonr}^, or Heresy, or Republican- 
ism. It will continue to sigh iu vain for the return of the days of Phillip 
II and Mary of England, of Loyola, and Alva and Torquemada. If 
it succeeds in instigating the Kings of Spain and Portugal to engage 
in the work of extirpating Free Masonry, these will owe to it the speedy 
loss of their crowns. The world is no longer in a humor to be saddled 
and bitted like an ass, and ridden by Capuchins and Franciscans. 
Humanity has inhaled the fresh, keen winds of freedom, and escaped 
from companionship with the herds that chew the cud, and the inmates of 
stables and kennels, to the highlands of Liberty, Equality and Brother- 
hood. 

" The world is not likely to forget the infallible Pope Urban VII. 
Barber ina set his signature to the sentence which condemned to per- 
petiial imprisonment, to abjuration, and to silence, Galileo Galilei, who, 
it is known, avoided being burned at the stake by denying on bended 
knees the deductions of positive science, which demonstrated the move- 
ment of the Earth, etc 

" Nor are Free Masons likely to forget that when the Bull of 
Clement XII, which Leo XIII now revives and re-enacts, was published ; 
Cardinal Firrao explained the nature of the punishments which were 
requested to be inflicted on Masons, and what the kind of service was 
which the Pope demanded from ' the Secular Arm.' 

" ' It is forbidden,' he said . . . . ' to affiliate one's self with the 
Societies of Masons .... under penalty of death, and of confis- 
cation OF GOODS, and to DIE UNABSOLVED AND WITHOUT HOPE OF 
SALVATION.' 

"Who will be audacious enough to censure us for replying defiantly 
to a decree which, by revivor of the Bull of Clement, condemns every Free 
Mason in the world to death, and confiscation, and damns him in advance 
to die without hope of salvation ? The world has not forgotten that 
when Charles IX of France and the Due de Guise at first disowned 
responsibility for the massacre of twenty thousand Protestants and 
others, on the eve, and after the Eve of St. Bartholomew, the Catholic 
Clergy assumed it. Heaven adopted it, they said : ' it was not the 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 505 

massacre of the king and the Duke : // luas the Justice of God^ Then 
the slaughter re-commenced, of neighbor by neighbor, of women, of 
children, of children unborn, in order to extinguish families the wombs 
of the mothers were cut open, and the children torn from them for fear 
they might survive. 

'' Men remembered that at Saint Michael, the Jesuit Auger, sent 
thither from the college of Paris, announced to Bordeaux that the Arch- 
angel Michael had made the great massacre, and deplored the sluggish- 
ness of the Governor and Magistrates of Bordeaux. After the 24th of 
August there were feasts. The Catholic Clerg}- had theirs at Paris, on 
the 28th, and ordered a jubilee, to which the King and Court went, and 
returned thanks to God. And the King who proclaimed that he had 
caused Coligni to be killed, said that he would have poinarded him with 
Bis own hand, was flattered to intoxication by the praises and congratu- 
tions of Rome. Do men not remember that there were feasts and great 
gaities at Rome on account of the massacre ? That the Pope chanted 
the Te Deimi Laudmnus and sent to ' his son,' Charles IX (to win for 
whom the whole credit of the massacre, the Cardinal of Lorraine moved 
Heaven and Earth) the Rose of Gold? was coined by Rome to commem- 
orate it, and a painting of the bloody scene was made, and until lately 
hung in the Vatican ? 

" Free Masonry is strong enough, everywhere now, to defend itself, 
and does not dread even the Hierarchy of the Roman Church, with 
its great revenues, and its Cardinal Princes claiming to issue the decrees, 
and Bulletins of God, and to hold the keys with which it locks and 
unlocks, at pleasure, the Gates of Paradise. The Powers of Free 
Masonry, too, sending their words to one another over the four Conti- 
nents and the great Islands of the Southern Seas, colonized by English- 
men, speak but with only the authority of reason, Urbi et Orbi, to men 
of free souls and high courage, and quick intelligence. ' It does not 
need that Free Masonry should take up arms of any sort against the 
Church of Rome. Science, the wider knowledge of what God is, learned 
from His works ; the irresistible progress of Civilization, the Spirit of the 
Nineteenth Century ; these are the sufficient avengers of the mutilations 
and murders of the long ages of a horrid Past. These have already 
avenged Humanity, and Free Masonry need not add another word, except 



506 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

these, that there are two questions to be asked and answered, thereunto 
demanded of all Roman Catholics in the United States, who are loyal to 
the Constitution of Government under which they live, patriotic citizens 
of the United States : I?oes not yotir conscience tell yoti that what is now 
demanded of yoti by Pope Leo XI If by the General of the fesziits ajid the 
Chief Inquisitor is to engage actively in a conspiracy against that 
Constitution of Government, and the principles on which it is 
founded; after the dethronement of which principles that Con- 
stitution OF Government could not live an hour? 

" If you cannot see it iu that light, do not yottr conscietice and cotn^non 
sense tell yoti that to approve, and favor, and give aid and assistance 

TO AN OPEN conspiracy AGAINST EVERY OTHER REPUBLIC, AND EVERY 

Constitutional Monarchy in the world, and the principles on which 
they are founded, is to play a part that is inconsistent with the 

principles that you profess to be GOVERNED BY HERE, IS IN OPPOSITION 
TO ALL THE SYMPATHIES OF THE COUNTRY IN WHICH YOU LIVE, AND IS HOS- 
TILE TO THE INFLUENCES OF ITS EXAMPLE AMONG THE PEOPLE OF OTHER 
COUNTRIES, TREACHEROUS TO YOUR OWN COUNTRY, AND UNWORTHY OF 

American citizens. You will have to answer these questions ; for they 
will not cease to be reiterated until you do ; and not by Free-Masonry 

ALONE." 

Let me quote you from an article by H. T. B., of Kansas City, Mo., 
published in the " Trestle Board " of June, 1896 :— " The English-speak- 
ing race, rising from the sea of nations first lighted the fires of religious 
liberty in the British isles. The history of this race for eighteen hun- 
dred years has been a continuous struggle for religious and political 
freedom against the papal hierarchy, and nearly all its bloody and 
unceasing warfare has been in self-defence, or in defence of others of 
like faith, or for the purpose of extending the faith by enlargement of 
area. 

" Excommunicated and opposed at times by nearly all the world at 
the instigation of Rome, it has disrupted its enemies and caused them to 
cripple each other, and has emerged stronger and wealthier than ever, 
until in our own day one-third of the world and its inhabitants is under 
its influence or direct rule, and the end is not yet. With all branches of 
this race united, no other power on earth can hold control, and Rome 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 507 

which aims at universal dominion is well aware of the fact. ..." By- 
flattery, and fanning the flames of jealousy, she strives to promote ill 
feeling between us and our natural allies, and would make us believe that 
the world is too small for both, and that their policy, no matter what it is, 
must be necessarily opposed to our interests. 

" She urges that an alliance with the degraded and financially- 
impoverished South American despotisms (masquerading as republics), 
with their priest-ridden and rickety governments, with no trade, no enter- 
prise and no love for us or our institutions, is preferable to the friendship 
of our own kith and kin, whose flag is the emblem of what we hold most 
dear, who ofi"ers free ports, free schools, free religious opinions, free press, 
free welcome and protection to all, who if she extends her territory makes 
no restrictions in favor of her own subjects, and under whose flag the 
missionary may proclaim his message assured of protection, who if she 
erred in the past has profited by experience, and now seeks to rule by 
wisdom and not by force, and has beyond contradiction improved the con- 
dition of all her colonies. 

" What have we in common with anj^ people on earth outside our 
own royal race ? On what is the pretended friendship of Russia based 
but self-interest, and rivalry of England, and the desire to make a fool 
of us. 

" Did France assist us through love, or because she hated Great 
Britain ? 

" What do the mongrel races of South America care for us except as 
a cats-paw to pull their chestnuts out of the fire, or as a defence behind 
which they can run riot and be impudent at will ? 

" If Rome loves our institutions as she professes to do, why does she 
not essay to introduce them where her will is sole authority ? So far from 
this, here and in Canada, she would destroy our schools if she could ; and, 
so far from upholding our institutions, with her followers in power, she 
has corrupted our nobly-conceived government until it has degenerated 
into a mixture of spasmodic anarchy, aggravated by a riot of trusts domi- 
nated by the wire-pulling of a short-sighted plutocracy. 

" Luckily our people are awakening to the danger. The foreigner 
by sentiment, if not always by birth, is wresting the sceptre from our 
grasp, and we are in imminent danger of losing our birthright. 



508 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

" Great Britain like ourselves, by reason of her views, has not a friend 
in the world, and undoubtedly her desire at the present time is to win our 
love and alliance, and to effect this is willing to sacrifice anything but 
honor and self-respect. There is room for both in the world. What she 
cannot control herself she would only be too glad to see controlled by a 
friendly, Protestant, English-speaking people like ourselves, and to save 
it from the ckitches of her hereditary Foes." 

Free Masonry neither fears, nor hates, any Sect or Societ}', but stands 
on guard to protect Humanity from the Intolerance of Jesuitry and the 
waning power of the Romish Church, and to give Man empire over him- 
self, never permitting Tyranny, Fanaticism and Ignorant Brutality to 
dominate the world as they did in the days of old. " Nekani Adonai.'" 



Cfiebes— ©olossi— IBer^el^Baftari-Huxor-Earnafe, 



509 



POEM FOUND INSCRIBED ON THE FRONT OF THE PEDESTAL 
OF THE VOCAL MEMNON. 

'8ca-borti Cbctis, learned Mcmnon suffered never pangs of d)nng.' 
'Still, where Libyan mountains rise, sounds the voice of bis loud 

erying ' — 
'(Mountains wbieb tbe JVilc-stream, laving, parts from 'Cbebes, the 

bundrcd-gated ) ' — 
' dbcn be glows, tbrougb rays maternal witb warm ligbt illumi- 
nated.' 
' But tby son who, never-sated, dreadful battle still was seeking,' 
'Dumb in "Croy and Cbessaly, rests now, never speaking.' 

— ASKLEPICDOTUS. 



510 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 511 




CHAPTER XXII. 

THEBES-COLOSSI-DER-EL-BAHARI-LUXOR-KARNAK. 

HE reader's attention was called in tlie closing part of Chapter XX 
to our arrival at the threshold of " Hundred-gated Thebes," con- 
spicxiously located on the banks of the river Nile, distant from Cairo 
about four hundred and fift3'-four miles. Its origin is lost in the misty- 
ages of the past, and according to the best authorities it is not so ancient 
as Memphis, the capital of Lower Egypt. 

The next morning we arose bright and early, took our breakfast and 
with Hassan and Salame, preceded by our guide armed with a long 
spear, we rode out to visit the Colossi, distant about three miles. Our 
way led us alotig through cultivated fields, first winding one way then 
another, but all the time nearing our point of destination, the Colossi, for 
they are constantly in view. 

These two statues sit looking out across the plains of Thebes, toward 
the ruined palaces of a vanished race ; wearied, and worn, and crumbling 
into dust as the mighty ages roll along. Thej^ still preserve a sublime 
majest}^ even in their mutilated isolation. They are carved out of 
breccia, a. kind of pebbl}' sandstone, and to this fact is due their preserva- 
tion, for had they been composed of limestone they would have passed 
through the lime kiln and have been destroyed long ago. They both sit 
facing the Nile and looking to the East, and when it is high Nile they 
are surrounded with water that laps just above their feet. 

Lepsius informs us that the Arabs called them Sanama/, or the 
idols. They are distant one from the other about twenty yards, and were 
originally monoliths, having been carved from a single block of breccia. 
Strabo informs us that they were thrown down by an earthquake some- 
where about B. c. 27, and during the reign of Septimus Severus the}^ were 
restored, but the work was very poorly executed. The most northern of 
the two is known as the I ^ocal Stahie of Memnon {Amenophis) and called 



512 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

by the Arabs Tavia^ and the one to the south, Shmna. This one is in a 
far better state of preservation than the other. The height of the statues 
themselves is very nearly fifty-two feet, and the height of the pedestal 
beneath them thirteen feet, which would make the entire height of the 
monument or statue close upon sixty-five feet. From the bottom of the 
feet to the top of the knees measures nineteen feet ten inches ; the breadth 
across the shoulders nineteen feet and eight inches ; the middle finger is 
four feet and six inches long ; the foot of each figure is full}- ten feet and 
six inches long, and the entire weight of the statue, throne and all, has 
been estimated at one thousand one hundred and seventy five tons. The 
northern pedestal, as well as from the feet to the knees, has been covered 
with beautiful Greek and Latin inscriptions, and quotations written by 
numerous people who no doubt came here to listen to the stou}' voice of 
Memnon. Some of these inscriptions bear the early date of the eleventh 
year of Nero. 

To-day they are isolated and alone, but at one time they were sur- 
rounded with the magnificence of ancient Thebes, and formed the com- 
mencement of a most beautiful avenue that led up to the pjdou of a 
temple. Jitdging from the size of the statues themselves, the temple 
must have been a most magnificent structure, but being composed of 
limestone it became food for the lime kiln, and passed through the 
voracious maw of that monster who destroyed thousands of priceless 
jewels belonging to Eg3'pt in her Golden Age. The ruined site of the 
temple itself is covered with the shrouding desert sands, while these two 
ancient guardians of the temple sit majestically alone in silent solitude. 

After leaving the Colossi we rode out toward Medinet Habii^ situated 
at the foot of the Libyan range of mountains about a mile west from here. 
The road took us out along dikes, and cultivated fields, groups of dom 
palms, and beautiful gardens. There was not a breath of air stirring, 
and the sun shone down upon us with hot burning rays. We rode on 
our wa}' until we foixnd the rocks beginning to gather around us and 
eventually we found ourselves before the gates of Medinet Habu. 

The ruins of this place consist of a small temple founded by Qtieeji 
Hatasu daughter of Thothmes first of the XVIII dynasty, who erected it 
in honor of her father. A very much larger one was built by Rameses 
III, who was called Tlie Sesostris of Herodotus. 




CO 

CO 

—I u 
O X 

h 
QJ 

X 
I- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 513 

This temple or palace is a noble specimen of ancient Egyptian 
Architecture. It is decorated with sculptures of all kinds, beautiful 
paintings, etc. It is one of the most magnificent temples to be found 
throughout the " Land of Egypt." Of course it does not begin to com- 
pare with the stupendous magnitude of Karnak, but its beautiful courts, 
superb columns, its most exquisite paintings and its peculiar style of 
walls, etc., lend a peculiar charm and fascination to it, making it a 
most attractive and interesting spot for the tourist and Masonic student 
to visit. 

It is said to have been built by Rameses III as an offering to the 
" Gods of Egypt," in permitting him to gain a victory over his enemies. 
The paintings and sculptures within this temple demonstrate the com- 
plete triumph of an Egyptian Warrior King, not only triumphing over 
his enemies in battle, but in grand processional triumph, and sacred cere- 
monies after his conquest. There are man}^ places where the pictures 
do not refer to war, captives, and slaves returning with spoils, but to 
hunting scenes, etc. In one of the upper apartments the King is sur- 
rounded by his harem in a variety of ways. He is also represented as 
playing a game of draughts with a lady, possibly some favorite of his 
harem. No matter what pictures we examine in this ancient temple, 
whether it is Rameses conquering a fleet of ships, or in his war chariot 
fighting and overcoming his enemies, or receiving the cut off hands of 
the conquered Libyans, or assisting in the mystic ceremonies within the 
temple, they are all of the deepest interest. If all those who go into this 
most extraordinar}^ country for the purpose of carefull}^ examining, not 
only the various tombs and temples, but those exquisite sculptures and 
paintings upon the walls, would only begin at the beginning of these 
decorations they would be enabled, in many instances, to trace the life 
and history of the whole reign of the King ; his battles on sea, or on 
land, his spoils, his return, and welcome, the grand procession and glori- 
ous mystic ceremonies, and finally his interview with the Gods of Egypt 
alone. After which we find him enjoying the pleasure of the society of 
the ladies of his harem, in fact the whole series of pictures if properly 
linked together will give us a biographical sketch of his life and reign. 

While we w^ere examining the interior decorations of this charming 
temple, Hassan and Salame were preparing our luncheon, and before we 
3.3 



514 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

left we partook of refreshments in the hj^postyle hall of this most extra- 
ordinary building, after which we mounted and rode off on our way to 
the Ramesseum which is located about a mile to the northeast. 

This building is the mortuary temple of Rameses 11, and the one 
that is described by Diodorus as the temple of Osymandyas, being User- 
Maa-Ra^ otherwise Rameses II. The Ramesseum is a beautiful temple, 
and verj^ much different from the great majority because it is not inclosed 
within walls, and shut out from the light of day. Here the free air cir- 
culates throughout the whole of the building, and we find no damp ill 
smelling odors within this temple, for the glorious raj^s of the sun 
god Ra illuminates its interior and dispels- the darkness and gloom that 
we find in nearly all others. Its architectural design and exquisite deco- 
rations will compare favorably with any other structure in the Valley of 
the Nile. 

This temple was built by Rameses, and it was probably intended for 
the worship of the manes of this Great Warrior King, whose mummy was 
no doubt originally laid to rest within the sacred walls of this most mag- 
nificent fabric. To-day there is but very little of it remaining to guide 
either the traveller or student in his examination, yet they can still plainly 
trace the description of Diodorus amidst its ruins. We are perfectly 
assured, in our own mind, that it was originally the " Tomb of Osyman- 
dyas." Although it is in such a ruinous condition, we can still find 
evidences to prove Diodorus's description, from the first pylon to the 
largest statue in Egypt, which lies prone upon the ground. It still occu- 
pies the same place that it did when Cambyses hurled it from' its original 
position in his mad rage. It lies there to-day disfigured and broken. 

The battle scene with the lion, the fortress surrounded by water, and 
the golden stars on a blue ground, are still to be seen, in fact all the 
various things that were mentioned by Diodorus have been found in this 
temple. ChmnpoUion discovered here the figures of Tlioth, the inventor 
of letters, and the goddess Saf^ the " Lady of Letters," President of the 
Hall of Books, inscribed upon the jambs of a doorway which was no doubt 
the entrance to the Sacred Library that Diodorus describes — "The Dis- 
pensary of the Mind." Before leaving this ver}^ interesting ruin, I desire 
that you should know the dimensions of the colossal statue that was 
uninjured when Diodorus saw it in A. d. 6o. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 515 

The leaders of the French expedition made some very careful measure- 
ments of this statue, which are as follows : Across the back from shoulder 
to shoulder, twenty-one feet six inches ; across the chest from shoulder to 
shoulder, twenty-three feet four inches ; across the face from ear to ear 
six feet nine inches ; length of the ear, three feet six inches ; circumfer- 
ence of the arm close to the elbow, seventeen feet six inches ; length of 
the forefinger, over three feet ; length of the nail on the middle finger, 
seven and one-half inches, the breadth of the same nail being six inches ; 
width of the foot across the toes, four feet six inches ; and the height of 
this statue when in situ was fifty-seven feet six inches ; the total weight 
of this most extraordinary statue being estimated by them at fully two 
million pounds. 

About a half a mile to the north of the Ramesseum, and just bej'ond 
Shekh ^Abd el-Qurna, and a short distance south of the ancient temple of 
Der el-Bahari is where Professor M. Maspero discovered the Royal mum- 
mies in the summer of 1881, and in relation to this find I will quote 3'ou 
from " Cleopatra's Needles " by the Rev. James King, M. A., an account 
of this wonderful discovery and their transportation to Gizeh, etc. 

" Professor M. Maspero lately remarked that for 3'ears he had noticed 
with considerable astonishment, that many valuable Egyptian relics found 
their way in a mysterious manner to European Museums as well as to the 
private collections of European noblemen. He therefore suspected that 
the Arabs in the neighborhood of Thebes, in Upper Egypt, had discovered 
and were plundering some royal tomb. This suspicion was intensified by 
the fact that Mr. Colin Campbell, on returning to Cairo from a visit to 
Upper Egypt, showed to the Professor some pages of a royal ritual pur- 
chased from some Arabs at Thebes. M. Maspero accordingly made a 
journey to Thebes, and on arriving at the place conferred on the subject 
with Daoud Pasha, the governor of the district, and offered a handsome 
reward to any person who would give information of an}' recently dis- 
covered royal tombs. . . . Behind the Ramesseum is a terrace of rock-hewn 
tombs, occupied by the families of four brothers named Abd-cr-Rasoid. 
The brothers professed to be guides and donkey masters, but in reality 
they made their livelihood by tomb breaking and mummy snatching. 
Suspicion at once fell upon them, and a mass of concurrent testimony 
pointed to the four brothers as the possessors of the secret. 



516 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

" With the approval of the district governor, one of the brothers, 
Ahmad- Abd-er-Rasoul, was arrested and sent to prison at Keneh^ the chief 
town of the district. Here he remained in confinement for two months, 
and preserved an obstinate silence ; at length Mohammed, the eldest 
brother, fearing that Ahmad's constancy might give way, and fearing lest 
the family might lose the reward offered by Maspero, came to the governor 
and volunteered to divulge the secret. Having made his dispositions, the 
governor telegraphed to Cairo whither the Professor had returned. 

" It was felt that no time should be lost. Accordingly M. Maspero 
empowered Herr Emil BrtigscJi, keeper of the Boolak Museum, and 
Alimcd Effendi Keinal, also of the Museurh service, to proceed without 
delay to Upper Egypt. In a few hours from the arrival of the telegram 
the Boolak officials were on their way to Thebes. The distance of the 
journey is four hundred and fifty-four miles, and as a great part had to be 
undertaken by the Nile steamer, four days elapsed before they reached 
their destination, which they did on Wednesday, 6th of July, 1881. 

'' On the western side of the Theban plain rises a high mass of lime- 
stone rock enclosing two desolate valleys. One runs up behind the ridge 
into the very heart of the hills, and being entirely shut in by the limestone 
cliffs is a picture of wild desolation. The other valley runs up from the 
plain, and its mouth opens out towards the cit}- of Thebes. ' The former 
is the Valley of the Tombs of the Kings — the Westminster Abbey of 
Thebes ; the latter the Tombs of the Priests and Princes — its Canterbury 
Cathedral.' 

" High up among the limestone cliffs, and near the plateau overlook- 
ing the plain of Thebes, is the site of an old temple known as Der-el- 
Bahari. At this last named place, according to agreement, the Boolak 
of&cials met Mohammed- Abd-er-Rasoul, a spare, sullen fellow, who simply 
from the love of gold had agreed to divulge the grand secret. Pursuing 
his way among desolated tombs, and under the shadow of precipitous 
cliffs, he led his anxious followers to a spot described as ' unparalleled, 
even in the desert, for its gaunt solemnity.' Here, behind a huge frag- 
ment of fallen rock, perhaps dislodged for that purpose from the cliffs 
overhead, they were shown the entrance to a pit so ingeniously hidden 
that, to use their own words, ' one might have passed it twenty times with- 
out observing it.' 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 517 

" The shaft of the pit proved to be six and a half feet square; and on 
being lowered by means of a rope, the}' touched the ground at a depth of 
about fort}^ feet. Truth is sometimes stranger than fiction, and certainly 
nothing in romantic literature, can surpass in dramatic interest, the revela- 
tion which awaited the Boolak Officials in the subterranean sepulchral 
chambers of Der-el-Bahari. At the bottom of the shaft the explorers 
noticed a dark passage running westward ; so, having lit their candles, 
they groped their way along the passage which ran in a straight line for 
twenty-three feet and then turned abruptly to the right, stretching away 
northward into the darkness. 

'' At the corner where the passage turned northward, they found a 
ro3-al funeral canopy flung carelessly down in a tumbled heap. As they 
proceeded, they found the roof so low in some places that they were 
obliged to stoop, and in other parts the rocky floor was A^ery uneven. At 
a distance of sixt}^ feet from the corner, the explorers found themselves 
at the top of a flight of stairs roughh-- hewn out of the rock. Having 
descended these steps, each with his flickering candle in hand, they pur- 
sued their way along a passage slightly descending and penetrating 
deeper and farther into the heart of the mountain. As they proceeded 
the floor became more and more strewn with fragments of mumni}^ cases 
and tattered pieces of mummy bandages. Presently they noticed boxes 
piled on the top of each other against the wall, and these boxes proved to 
be filled with statuettes, libation jars, and Canopic vases of precious 
alabaster. Then appeared several huge coffins of painted wood ; and 
great was their joy when they gazed upon a crowd cf mummy cases, 
some standing, some laid upon the ground, each fashioned in human 
form, with folded hands and solemn faces. On the breast of each was 
emblazoned the name and titles of the occupant. Words fail to describe 
the joyous excitement of the scholarly explorers, when among the group 
they read the names of Seti I, Thothmes II, Thothmes III, and Rameses 
II, surnamed The Great. 

" The Boolak Officials had journeyed to Thebes, expecting at most 
to find a few mummies of petty princes, but on a sudden they were ■ 
brought, as it were, face to face with the mightiest Kings of ancient 
Egypt, and confronted the remains of heroes whose exploits and fame 
filled the ancient world with awe more than three thousand years ago. 



518 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

The explorers stood bewildered and could scarcely believe the testimony 
of their own eyes, and actually inquired of each other if they were not in 
a dream. At the end of a passage, one hundred and thirty feet from the 
bottom of the rock-cut passage, they stood at the entrance of a sepulchral 
chamber twenty-three feet long and thirteen feet wide literally piled to 
the roof with mummy cases of enormous size. The coffins were brilliant 
with color-gilding and varnish, and looked as fresh as if they had 
recently come out of the workshops of the Memnonmm. 

" Among the mummies of this Mortuary Chapel were found Kings, 
Queens, Princes and Princesses, besides royal and priestly personages of 
both sexes, all decendants of Her Hoi\ the founder of the line of priest 
kings known as the twent3^-first dynasty. The chamber was manifestly 
the vault of the Her Hor family ; while the mummies of their niore 
illustrious predecessors of the eighteenth and nineteenth dynasties found 
in the approaches to the chamber, had evidently been brought there for 
the sake of safety. Each member of the family was buried with the 
usual mortuary outfit. One Oueen, named Isi-em-Keb (Isis of Lower 
Egypt), was also furnished with a sumptous funeral repast, as well as a 
rich sepulchral toilet, consisting of ointment bottles, alabaster cups, gob- 
lets of exquisite variegated glass, and a large assortment of full-dress 
wigs curled and frizzed. As the funeral repast was designed for refresh- 
ment, so the sepulchral toilet was designed for the queen's use and adorn- 
ment on the Resurrection morn, when the vivified dead, clothed, fed, 
anointed and perfumed, should leave the dark sepulchral chamber and 
go forth to the mansions of everlasting day. 

" When the temporary excitement of the explorers had somewhat 
abated they felt no time was to be lost in securing their newly discovered 
treasures. Accordingly, three hundred Arabs were engaged from the 
neighboring villages ; and working as they did with unabated vigor, 
without sleep, and without rest, they succeeded in cleaning out the 
sepulchral chamber, and the long passages of their valuable contents in 
the short space of forty-eight hours. All the mummies were then care- 
fully packed in sail cloth, and matting, and carried across the plains of 
Thebes to the edge of the river. Thence they were rowed across the 
Nile to Luxor, there to He in readiness for embarkation on the approach 
of the Nile Steamer. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 519 

'' Some of the sarcophagi are of huge dimensions, the largest being 
that of Nofretari a queen of the eighteenth dynasty. The coffin is ten 
feet long, made of cartonnage, and style resembles one of the Osiride 
pillars of the temple of Mcdinct Habu, Its weight and size are so enor- 
mous that sixteen men were required to remove it. In spite of all diffi- 
culties, however, onl}^ five days elapsed from the time the Boolak 
Officials were lowered down the shaft until the precious relics la}^ ready 
for embarkment at Luxor. 

" The Nile steamers did not arrive for three days, and during the time 
Messrs. Brugsch, and Kemal, and a few trustworthy Arabs kept constant 
guard over their treasure amid a fanatical people who regarded tomb 
breaking as the legitimate trade of the neighborhood. On the fourth 
morning the steamer arrived, and having received on board the royal 
mummies, steamed down the stream " en route " for the Boolak Museum. 
Meanwhile the news of the discovery had spread far and wide, and for 
fifty miles below Luxor, the villagers lined the banks of the river, not 
merely to catch a glimpse of the mummies on deck as the steamers 
passed by, but also to show respect for the mighty dead. Women with 
dishevelled hair ran along the banks shrieking the death wail ; Avhile men 
stood in solemn silence, and fired guns into the air to greet the mighty 
Pharaohs as they passed. Thus to the mummified bodies of Thothmes 
the Great, and Rameses the Great, and their illustrious compeers, the 
funeral honors paid to them three thousand years ago were in a meas- 
ure, repeated as the mortal remains of the heroes sailed down the Nile on 
their way to Boolak. 

" The principal personages found either as mummies, or represented 
by their mummy cases, include a King and Queen of the seventeenth 
dynasty^ five Kings and four Queens of the eighteenth dynasty, and three 
successive Kings of the nineteenth dynasty, namely, Rameses the Great, 
his Father and his Grandfather. The twentieth dynasty strange to say 
is not represented ; but belonging to the twenty-first dynasty of royal 
priests are four Queens, two Kings, a prince and a princess. These royal 
mummies belong to four dynasties, under which ancient Egj'pt reached 
the summit of her fame. Through the expulsion of the Hyksos inva- 
ders, and the extensive conquests of Thothmes III and Rameses the 
Great, the oppression of Israel in Egypt and the Exodus of the Hebrews, 



520 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

the colossal temples of Thebes, the royal sepulchres of the Valley of the 
Tombs of the Kings, the greater part of the Pharaonic obelisks, and 
the rock cut temples of the Nile Valley belong to this period- 

" ThoTHMES III. — Standing near the end of the long dark passage 
running Northward and not far from the threshold of the family vaiilt 
of the priest kings, lay the sarcophagus of Thothmes III close to that of 
his brother Thothmes II. The mummy case was in a lamentable con- 
dition, and had evidently been broken into, and subjected to rough usage. 
On the lid, however, were recognized the well-known cartouches of this 
illustrious monarch. On opening the coffin the mumni}^ itself was ex- 
posed to view, completely enshrouded with bandages ; but a rent near the 
left breast shows that it had been exposed to the violence of tomb break- 
ers. Placed inside the cofi&n and surrounding the body were found 
wreaths of flowers ; larkspurs, acacias and lotuses. They looked as if 
but recently dried, and even their colors could be discerned. Long 
hieroglyphic texts found written on the bandages contained the seven- 
teenth chapter of the ' Ritual of the Dead ' and the ' Litanies of the 
Sun.' The body measured only five feet two inches ; so that making due 
allowance for .the shrinking and compression in the process of embalm- 
ing, still it is manifest that Thothmes III was not a man of commanding 
stature ; but in shortness of stature, as in brilliancy of conquest, finds 
his counterpart in Napoleon the Great. 

" It was desirable in the interest of science to ascertain whether the 
mummy bearing the monogram of Thotlunes III^ was really the remains 
of that monarch. It was therefore unrolled. The inscription on the 
bandages established beyond all doubt, the fact that it was indeed the 
most distinguished of the kings of the brilliant XVIII dynasty, and once 
more, after an interval of tliirty-six centuries humanity gazed on the fea- 
tures of the man who had conquered Syria^ Cyrus and Ethiopia^ and had 
raised Egypt to the highest pinnacle of her power ; so that it was said in 
his reign ' she placed her frontiers where she pleased.' The spectacle 
was of brief duration ; the remains proved to be in so fragile a state that 
there was only time to take a hasty photograph, and then the features 
crumbled to pieces and vanished like an apparition, and so passed from 
human view for ever. The director felt such remorse at the result that 
he refused to allow the unrolling of Ravieses the Great for fear of a simi- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 521 

lar catastrophe. Thothmes III was the man who overran Palestine with 
his armies tzejo hundred years before the birth of Afoses, and has left us a 
diary of his adventures ; for, like Cesser he was an author as well as a 
soldier. 

" It seemed so strange that though the body mouldered to dust, the 
flowers with which it had been wreathed were so wonderfully preserved, 
that even their color could be distinguished ; yet a flower is the very type 
of ephemeral beauty, that passeth away and is gone almost as soon as 
born. A wasp which had been attracted by the floral treasures, and had 
entered the coffin at the moment of closing, was found dried up, but still 
perfect, having lasted better than the king whose emblem of sovereignty 
it had once been ; now it was there to mock the embalmer's skill, and to 
add point to the sermon on the vanity of human pride, and power 
preached to us by the contents of that cofiin. Inexorable is the decree, 
' Unto dust thou shalt return.' " 

Following the same line of meditation, it is difiicult to avoid a 
thought of the futility of human devices to achieve immortality. These 
Egyptian monarchs the veriest type of earthlj^ grandeur and pride, whose 
rule was almost limitless, whose magnificent tombs seem built to outlast 
the hills, could find no better method of ensuring that their names 
should be held in remembrance, than the embalmment of their frail 
bodies. These remain, but in what a condition, and how degraded are 
the uses to which they are put. The spoil of an ignorant and thieving 
population, the pet curiosity of some wealthy tourist, who buys a royal 
mummy as he would buy the Sphinx if it were movable. 

RamESES II died about thirteen centtiries before the Christian era. 
It is certain that this illustrious monarch was originally buried in the 
stately tomb of the magnificent subterranean sepulchre by royal order 
hewn out of the limestone cliffs in the Valley of THE 'Tombs of the 
Kings. In the same valley his grandfather and father were laid to rest ; 
so that these three mighty kings " all lay in glory, each in his own 
house." This burial place of the Pharaohs of the XVIII and XIX dynas- 
ties is in a deep gorge behind the Western hills of the Theban plain. 

" The valley is the very ideal of desolation. Bare rocks without a 
particle of vegetation, overhanging and enclosing in a still narrower 
and narrower embrace, a valley as rocky, and bare as themselves — no 



522 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

human habitation visible— the stir of the city wholly excluded. Such is, 
such must always have been, the awful aspect of the resting-place of the 
Theban kings." 

The sepulchres of this valley are of extraordinary grandeur. You 
enter a sculptured portal in the face of these wild cliffs, and find yourself 
in a long and lofty gallery, opening or narrowing as the case maybe, 
into successive halls and chambers, all of which are covered with white 
stucco, brilliant with colors, fresh as they were thousands of years ago. 
The sepulchres are in fact magnificent palaces. Hewn out of the rock 
and painted with all the decorations of the tombs and temples. One of 
the most gorgeous of these sepulchral palaces, was that prepared in this 
valley by Ranieses II, and after the burial of the king the portals were 
walled up, and the mummified body laid to rest in the vaulted hall till 
the morn of Resurrection. From a hieratic inscription found on the 
mummy case of Ravieses, it appears that official Inspectors of Tombs vis- 
ited this royal tomb in the sixth year of Hc7'-Hor, the founder of the 
priestly line of kings ; so that at least for two centuries the mummy of 
Rameses the Great lay undisturbed, in the original tomb prepared for 
its original -reception. 

From several papyri still extant, it appears that the neighborhood of 
Thebes at that period was like it is to-day, filled with robbers of the dead, or 
tomb breakers. Such being the dreadful state of insecurity during the lat- 
ter period of the twentieth dynasty and throughout the whole of the Her- 
Hor dynasty, we are not surprised to find the mummy of Rameses Ily 
and that of his grandfather Rameses /, removed for greater security from 
their own separate catacombs into the tomb of his father Seti I. In the 
sixteenth year of Hcr-Hor, that is ten years after the official inspection 
mentioned above, a commission of priests visited the three royal mummies 
in the tomb of Seti. On an entry found on the mummy case of Seti and 
Rameses If the priests certify that the bodies are in an uninjured condi- 
tion ; but they deem it expedient, on grounds of safety, to traiisfer the 
three mummies to the tomb of Ansera, a queen of the seventeenth 
dynasty. 

For ten years at least Rameses"" body reposed in this abode ; but in 
the year of Pinotum it was removed into '' the eternal house " of Amcn- 
Hotep. A fourth inscription on the breast bandage of Rameses relates 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 523 

how that, after resting for six years, the body was again carried back to 
the tomb of his father in " ike Valley of the Tombs of the Kings, ^' a valley 
now called " Bab el-Molooky How long the body remained in this 
resting place, and how many transfers it was subsequently subjected to, 
there exists no evidence to show ; but after being exposed to many vicis- 
situdes, the mummy of Rameses II, together with those of his royal 
relatives and many of his illustriovis predecessors, was brought in as a 
refugee into the famil}^ vaiilt of the Her-Hor dynasty. In this subterra- 
nean hiding place, buried deep in the heart of the Theban Hills., Rameses 
the Great., surrounded b}^ a goodh- companj' of thirty royal mummies, lay 
undisturbed and unseen by mortal eyey^r three thousand years, until a few 
years ago the lawless tomb breakers of Thebes burrowed into this 
sepulchral chamber. 

The mummy-case containing Rameses'' mummy is not the original 
one, for it belonged to the style of the twenty-first dynasty, and was 
probably made at the time of the official inspection of his tomb in the 
sixth year oi Her-Hor'' s reign. It is made of unpainted sycamore wood, 
and the lid of the shape known as Osirian, that is, the deceased is repre- 
sented in the well known attitude of Osiris, with arms across, and hands 
grasping a crook and flail. The eyes are inserted in enamel, while the 
eyebrows, eyelashes and beard are painted black. Upon the breast are 
the familiar cartouches of Rameses If namely : — Ra-user-H^a-sotep-en-Ra, 
his prenomeu ; and Ra-mc-sn-Meri-Amen, his nomen. The mummy 
itself is in good condition, and measures six feet ; but as in the process of 
mummification, the larger bones were probably drawn closer together in 
their sockets. It seems self-evident that Rameses was a man of command- 
ing appearance. It is thus satisfactory to know that the mighty Sesostris 
was a hero of great physical stature, that this conqueror of Palestine was 
in height equal to a grenadier. The outer shrouds of the body are made 
of rose colored linen and bound together by very strong bands. Within 
the outer shrouds, the mummy is swathed in original bandages ; and 
Professor M. Maspero has expressed his intention of removing these inner 
bandages, on some convenient opportunity', in the presence of scholars and 
medical witnesses. 

It has been urged that since Ra^neses XI f of the twentieth dynasty., 
had a prenomen similar, though not identical, with the divine cartouche 



524 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

of Rameses II, the mummy in question may be that of Ramcses XII. 
We have, however, shown that the mummies of Rameses /, Seti I and 
Rameses II were exposed to the same vicissitudes, being buried, trans- 
ferred and reburied again and again in the same vaults. When therefore 
we find in the sepulchre of Der-el Bahari^ in juxta-position, the mummy 
case of Rameses I, the mummy-case and acknowledged mummy of Seti I, 
and on the mummy- case and shroud the well known cartouches of 
Rameses II, the three standing in the relation of grandfather, father and 
son, it seems that the evidence is overwhelming in favor of the mummy 
in question being that of Rameses the Great. 

The whole of these mummies were o'riginally placed in the Boolak 
Museum, but they are to be found to-day at the Gizeh Museum, which is 
located a few miles from Cairo and close to the river. This Museum is 
open every day of the week to the general public, excepting Monday, 
when a small admission fee is charged. All these mummies have been 
arranged, numbered and set up for general inspection, and what a 
glorious company they are, for they represent the most mighty and 
renowned Warrior Kings of ancient Egypt, and what an inexpressible 
feeling comes over one in the presence of these illustrious mummied dead, 
when we think that not one of them lived after B. c. looo. 

Before closing the account of these mummies I will quote you from 
H. D. Rawnsley's " Notes for the Nile," page 84 et seq., which will prove 
that the mummy that was found with Rameses I, and Seti I, and known 
as Rameses the Great was actually and truly the mummy of Rameses II. 
" I had read in the Academy of July 3rd, 1886, the very startling and 
accurate account of the unwrapping of the mummies of Rameses II and 
Rameses III, which took place at the Bulak Museum Jvme ist, 18S6. 
There in the presence of His Highness Tewfik Pasha, Khedive of Egj'pt, 
and their excellencies Mouctar Pasha Ghazi, High Commissioner of the 
Sultan, Sir Drummond Wolf, Her Majesty's Consul, and other great 
persons, M. Gastine Maspero, the director of the antiquities of Egypt, and 
his subordinates, Messrs. Brugsch Bey and Bouriant, unrolled at nine 
o'clock in the morning the royal mummies brought from Der el BaJiari, 
and marked in the catalogue Nos. 5229 and 5233. 

" There was more of interest than at first sight attached to the 
unwrapping of the royal mummy No. 5233, for though the coffin had 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 525 

been found in close proximit}' to, and in company with, tlie coffins of 
Seti I and Rameses I, and though the coffin lid bore the nomen and pre- 
nomen of the illustrious Rameses II, it had been suggested by some 
Egyptologists that Rameses XII, of the XX dynasty, a man of no great 
noteworthiness, bore the similar divine name, or cartouche, as the Great 
Rameses the Second of the XIX dynasty. This coffin might contain the 
lesser notable's body, after all. The savants further pointed out the 
coffin-case was of the Osirian tyipe of the XX or XXI dynasty ; so that, 
as the royal assemblage gathered round coffin No. 5233, on the first of 
June, 1886, though Maspero was full}^ persuaded that the great Pharaoh's 
body lay before them, enveloped in its pink colored and yellow cerements, 
there was just enough element of doubt about it, to render his task 
intensely interesting as a work of identification, apart from the fact of the 
unveiling of a roj^al monarch. 

" The proces verbal of the dates on the coffin lid pointed to the 
mummj- being the mumm}^ of the great king. It had been written in 
black ink on the sycamore coffin case, and gave the years six and six- 
teenth of the royal or high priest Her Hor Siamun, and the tenth 5^ear of 
the ro3'al priest Pinotmou I, was traced on the first cerecloth or wrap- 
ping, just at the breast. The Khedive's attention was called to the 
inscription ; he nodded assent, and the unwrapping went forward. 
Beneath the first envelope was discovered a band of cloth, wrapped round 
and round the body, then a second envelope or shroud, sewn and kept in 
its place b}^ narrow bands from space to space ; next came two layers of 
small bandages, and then a piece of fine linen, stretching from head to 
foot; on this was painted in red and black, a representation of the god- 
dess of creation out of nothing, Nonit or Ncith^ as prescribed by the 
ritual of the dead. The goddess in profile unmistakably resembled the 
delicate features of Seti I, the father of Rameses II, as made known by 
the bas-reliefs of Thebes and Abydos. 

" This was proof, not positive, but looking very much as if the great 
son of Seti I la}' therein. A band of brand-new material had been placed 
beneath this amulet of the goddess Nouit ; then came a kind of quilt, of 
pieces of linen folded in squares, and struck together by the bituminous 
preparation the embalmers had used. There was considerable excite- 
ment amongst the bystanders. This last covering was removed and lo, 



526 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

"Among his perfumed wrappings Ram'ses laj', 
Son of the sun, and conqueror without peers ; 
The jewel-holes were in his rounded ears, 

His thick lips closed above th' embalmer's clay ; 

Unguent had turned his white locks amber-grey, 
But on his puissant chin fresh from the shears 
The thin hair gleamed which full three thousand years 

Of careless sleep could never disarray. 

Hands henna-stained across his ample breast 

Were laid in peace ; but through the narrow eyes 
Flamed fires no more beneath the forward brow. 

His keen hawk nose such pride, such power expressed, 
Near Kadesh stream we heard the Hittite cries, 
And saw by Hebrews' toil San's temple cities grow. 

" In less than a qtiarter of an hour from the commencement of the 
unwrapping, appeared from beneath its many cerements the great Sesos- 
tris himself, who had been embalmed with such care, and wrapped up so 
laboriously, over three thousand one hundred and eighty-six years ago." 

I have devoted considerable space to the discovery of the royal 
mummies of Ancient Egypt, and to the unwrapping of Rameses the 
Great, because, after having visited Der el-Bahari and the place where 
they were found, I was ver}' much interested in them, consequently I have 
written and quoted from the ver}' best authorities, all that was to be 
gleaned in relation to these celebrated mummies so that you, my dear 
Brothers and readers, may thoroughly understand everything pertaining 
to them. I have been so intensely interested in taking notes, measuring 
and examining these most extraordinary tombs, temples and monolithic 
stones and statues, that the da3's have come and gone without note, and 
yet, we have not described half of what is to be seen on this western bank 
of the river Nile, but, as we were very anxious to see and examine Luxor 
and Karnak, we discharged our gtiide and hired another for our excur- 
sions upon the other side of the river, who was to direct our steps in 
search of " More Light " among those stupendous ruins of Luxor and 
Karnak. We spent that evening with some acqitaintances we had made 
while examining the beautiful ruined temple of Medinet Habu. 

The night was lovely, so after our dinner, we sat up under the 
awning, and talked until a late hour upon the various tombs and temples, 







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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 527 

and the wondrous knowledge that pertained to those people who lived 
here in the "Golden Age" of Egypt. We drifted off into Scottish 
Masonry whose sublime philosophical and theosophical teachino-s ema- 
nated from the greater Mysteries of ancient Egypt, whose esoteric teach- 
ings were identical with the Indian and Mazdean of prehistoric ages. 

Early the next morning we took our breakfast and started out on 
our way to examine the celebrated temples of Luxor and Karnak, so we 
landed upon the river bank and made our way direct to the temple of 
Luxor. 

I iirst visited this temple many years ago with my father when I 
was a boy. I again visited it some years ago, on my return from India, 
at which time it was very difficult to move around in, for it was at that 
day literally filled with mud hovels of the Arabs, and it was nearly 
impossible to see anything at all whatever of the building proper, for it 
was a veritable village in itself containing a mosque. It was a very dirty 
village at that time, with very narrow filthy lanes or alleys through 
which to walk, amid stables, hen roosts, and pigeon houses that were 
plastered up against beautiful sculptured walls. There was so much 
confusion that I could not, under any circumstances, find out anything at 
all whatever in relation to the original plan of this especial part of the 
building, but to-dav it is very much different, thanks to Professor 
Maspero, M. Grebaut and others, who have changed it most wonderfully, 
for they certainly had a very difficult task in clearing the temple of these 
Arab invaders. 

They at first positively refused to sell their homes, or mud hovels in 
which they lived, and leave the temple. After long and tiresome negotia- 
tions were the}' induced to sell their mud houses and quit. There was 
one man Mustapha Aga, the British consul, who had built his consular 
residence between the columns of Horemeb, directly facing the river, and 
when he was approached in relation to buying him oiit, he asked them 
such an enormous price for his place, that it was simply impossible to do 
anything with him. He was a good kindly old fellow, and very hospitable, 
for his house was ever open to all travellers, but there was one thing that 
he was very peculiar about, and that was the selling of his home. It was 
not until this old fellow died that they were enabled to remove his 
residence from between the columns. Over forty other families had been 



528 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

bought out and got rid of, in one way or another, who rebuilt their 
homes upon the land that had been alloted to them. 

The little native mosque gave them far more trouble than any other 
thing in the temple, but \h.&y continiied in the good work until the year 
1886, when they cleared the temple of the dirty accumulations of these 
people, whom they had bought out, until all that remained as evidences 
of their occupation was the little mud Mosque. 

After the resignation of M. Maspero, M. Grabaut succeeded him, and 
followed up the work of the restoration of the temple. Any one who 
had visited it at the time I did, some years ago, would not to-day recog- 
nize it as the same building, for the dirty mud hovels, and accumulations 
of centuries have been removed from around the columns, clear down to the 
original pavement. During the performance of this work they discovered 
beneath " the rubbish of the temple," quite a number of magnificent 
colossal statues of Rameses II, in beautiful polished red granite. 

The traveller who goes there to-day will see the ruins of a most 
magnificent temple of exquisite design and beauty, second only to 
that of the Grand temple of Karnak itself, of which this was originally 
the gateway, as it were, to the most stupendous building ever erected by 
the hand of man — The temple of Karnak. 

One can very readily recognize the principal entrance, or pylon at 
Luxor, on account of the obelisk and colossi at the gateway. The com- 
panion stone to this remaining obelisk stands to-day in the famous Place 
de la Concorde. It was presented to the French government by Moham- 
med Ali and it cost them over a million francs to take from Luxor, and 
set it up in Paris, which was done in the year 1836. This stone is 
seventy-seven feet high, and about seven feet square at the base. The 
one still in situ measures about eighty-four feet in height, and seven 
feet six inches square at the base. 

The pictures on the front of the towers represent battle scenes. 
The first hall that we enter is about one hundred and eight-six 
feet, by one hundred and sixty-eight feet. Upon the walls are 
historical representations of Egyptian victories, etc. A colonnade of 
about one hundred and seventy feet long, connects this hall with another 
one, that is not quite so large as the first one. As we continued our jour- 
ney we at length found ourselves out of the temple at the west gate, stand- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 529 

ing facing the river, and the remains of a stone quay of the Roman age. 
We spent the day in this most extraordinary temple examining the 
various chambers, sanctuaries, columns, sculptures, etc., and were deeply 
interested in all we saw. It is so very difficult to describe the magnifi- 
cence of these beautiful ruins, but you, I hope, will be enabled to get 
some idea of its beauty not only from my description, but from many of 
the illustrations of this temple of Luxor and Karnak. 

We returned to our dahabiyeh tired and wear}^, and after dinner we 
smoked and chatted of what \\'& had seen. Our sailors went ashore to 
visit the crew of another dahabiyeh, and assist them in a grand fantasia, 
and we could hear their voices and recognize their songs until we dropped 
off to sleep. 

In the morning we landed at Luxor and hired donkeys, starting out 
along the avenue of sphinxes, that begins at the lone obelisk and extends 
for about two miles, from one temple to the other. We rode slowly down 
this avenue for more than a mile when the road turned slightly to the left. 
and we saw before us the p3'lon of Ptolemy III {Eurgetus I) through which 
we passed, and pushed on to the little temple of Rameses III. We did 
not stop here, only for a very short time, just peeped in, and turning 
sharp to the left we kept on, now toward the river, then to the right 
again until we arrived at another avenue of ram head sphinxes. At 
length we found ourselves before the main entrance of this wonderful 
temple of Karnak. 

We now dismounted and stood before it in awe and admiration, for we 
were now at the threshold of this most stupendous and magnificent gate- 
way of the grandest temple that was ever raised by the hands of man. 
One of the enormous towers is very nearly perfect, and its dimensions 
were three hundred and seventy feet broad, by one hundred and forty-two 
feet six inches high, with a depth of about fifty feet, so you can 
imagine what an enormous propylon it must be. One can readil}' make 
the ascent to the top from which they may obtain a beautiful view of the 
surrounding country, and all of these wonderful ruins. 

What a sight the avenue of mutilated sphinxes must have been in 
the glorious days of ancient Egyptian splendor, before they were ravaged 
by the hand of time, or by those disreputable image breakers whose van- 
dalism is visible throughout the whole of the Land of Egypt. No pen 

34 



530 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

can describe the magnificence, vastness and exquisite sculptures of this 
stupendous temple in its mutilated grandeur, as I saw it some few years 
ago. It must be seen to be fully appreciated and properly understood, 
for in no part of the world is there anything to compare with its magni- 
tude and beauty, the splendor of which no man can describe. 

We now passed through this enormous gateway and entered the 
outer court to the temple, it is two hundred and seventy-five feet deep by 
three hundred and thirty-eight feet wide, with a row of columns on each 
side, supporting a roof, Avhich forms a regular corridor on both sides of 
the court, excepting where the temple of Rameses III projects into it 
through the south wall. At the end of -this court we passed through 
another enormous gateway beautifully adorned with bas-reliefs and found 
ourselves in the celebrated hypostyle hall — the wonderful " Hall of 
Columns," the most beautiful and magnificent of its kind in the world 
to-day. It is one hundred and seventy feet long by three hundred and 
thirty-nine feet wide, whose roof is supported by one hundred and thirty- 
four most stupendous columns, twelve of which are twelve feet in diam- 
eter and sixty-two feet high, the other one hundred and twenty -two are 
nine feet in diameter and forty-two feet high, and all of them beautifully 
sculptured with kings, gods, etc., blazoned with royal names and emblems 
of all kinds. The immense stone beams that run from column to column 
are fully twenty-six feet long. I will not attempt to go into details in my 
description of this most magnificent temple, although as I stood among 
this forest of columns I seemed bewildered, and astonished, so much so 
that I could not find words wherein to express myself regarding this most 
marvellous building. 

On my return from India I camped in this temple, and lived here 
within its sacred precincts for weeks, during which time I have carefully 
examined the various points of interest, in the vicinit}^, but more espe- 
cially this temple itself I have wandered from court to court, ever find- 
ing something new in every part of its pillared halls and corridors. I 
have at times stood, lost in admiration and wonder, beneath the shadows of 
its enormous columns and gazed up to their capitals whose summits rose 
nearly seventy feet above me. Six of our party, with outstretched arms, 
attempted to encircle some of these columns, but without success. This 
was my last visit to this celebrated temple and I still found many things 




HYPOSTYLE HALL OF THE GKEAI I LMPLE OF KARNAK. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 531 

that were new to me and which filled me with astonishment. For hours 
I rambled eagerly around among the ruins, lost in admiration of its mag- 
nitude and its mutilated grandeur. I realized that I stood within the 
walls' of the grandest specimens of architectural design and beauty that 
have ever been executed by the hands of man, whose walls, columns, and 
pylons represent the torn, soiled, and ragged pages of the records of the 
most glorious dynasties of ancient Egyptian History. 

Tired with our investigations we turned away very reluctantly, and 
remounting our donkeys rode back toward Luxor, deeply impressed by 
what we had seen, having spent the whole day in very carefully measuring 
and examining the various parts of this most extraordinary building. 
Luxor now has lost its charm for us and Karnak is the dominant chord, 
for we talked of it, we thought of it, aye, we dreamed of it, and even 
to-day in memory I can still see the depth of its shadows, and the dazzling 
light playing upon its pillared halls and glorious sculptures. From every 
point of view, or at any time, whether by the effulgent rays of a mid-day 
sun, at eventide, or even under the rays of the glorious moon, Karnak is 
at its best — Majestic, Silent and Impressive. 

We at length arrived at the bank of the river, and were rowed to our 
dahabiyeh depositing our note books and traps in the cabin. We then 
strolled up to the postoffice and received two letters from home, and just 
as we returned the gong rang out the dinner hour. After which we 
informed Hassan, that we were ready to proceed on our journey, in the 
morning, if the wind should be in our favor. He told us that there was 
nothing that he needed, and that he had supplied himself abundantly for 
our journey southward. I spent the whole of the evening in writing 
letters and fixing up my notes, and retired early to sleep and rest, hoping 
for a favoring breeze in the morning. 

Since I last visited this celebrated temple the French government has 
undertaken the restoration of this most stupendous building, and while 
they were endeavoring to execute the work in hand, M. Lazani found one 
of the ancient city gates, a very valuable discovery, and said to be the 
first of its kind ever found in this country. It has upon it the date of the 
eighteenth dynasty. There are quite a number of new discoveries now 
being brought to light that will be of great importance, not only to the 
Egyptologist, but to the Masonic student. 



Ceremonies— initiation— BItic Uotrge— ®^ransnti= 
^ration— Jttgstev]) ^Language, 



533 



Bow poor, how rich, how abject, how aucfust, 

Bow complicate, how wonderful, is man! 

Bow passing wonder he who made him such! 

mho centred in our mahe such strange extremes. 

•from different natures marvellously mixed, 

Connection exquisite of distant worlds! 

Distinguished link in being's endless chain J 

Midway from nothing to Deity! 

H beam ethereal, sullied, and absorpt! 

■Chough sullied and dishonored, stitl divine! 

Dim miniature of greatness absolute ! 

Hn heir of glory! a frail child of dust! 

Belplcss immortal! insect infinite! 

H worm! a 6od! — 1 tremble at myself, 

Hnd in myself am lost. Ht home, a stranger, 

Chought wanders up and down, surprised, aghast, 

Hnd wondering at her own. Bow reason reels! 

O, what a miracle to man is man! 

Criumphantly distressed ! Slhat joy ! what dread I 

Hlternatcly transported and alarmed! 

dhat can preserve my life? or what destroy? 

Hn angel's arm can't snatch mc from the grave; 

Legions of angels can't confine me there. 

— Dk. Edward Young. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 535 



CHAPTER XXIII. 

CEREMONIES— INITIATION-BLUE LODGE— TRANSMIGRATION-MYSTERY 

LANGUAGE. 



TfRE: 



'REE MASONRY has stepped across the threshold of another century, 
I I bringing with it those sublime and beautiful Truths that have ever 
been the adrniration of the best men of every epoch of the world's history. 
Truths that were taught, practiced and thoroughly understood, long before 
the Vedic hymns were first chanted under the shadows of the Hindu Kush 
and Himalaya mountains, the home and birth-place of our great ancestors 
the Aryan Race. From which source it has found its way to every corner 
of the earth, and to-day the sun never sets upon our most Illustrious 
Fraternity. These great and glorious Truths which have been handed 
down to us were studied in the hoary ages of the past, under the dawning 
Light of a New Age and a New Race, by peoples whose visions were illu- 
minated from the dying embers of the Atlantcans and Le^niirians^ races 
that have passed or are passing away, but who have left behind them the 
very essence and aroma of their ancient knowledge and civilization. The 
traditions connected with those older peoples have helped us on to the 
Light, Knowledge and Truth now taught behind the closed doors of our 
Lodges, Chapters Councils and Consistories of the Ancient and Accepted 
Scottish Rite. 

Every intelligent Masonic student who is unprejudiced will realize 
the fact that Free Masonry has ramified from the Great Lodge of the 
Perfect Masters and Adepts of India. It has shaped the course of 
Empires, has controlled the destiny of all peoples upon the face of the 
earth, and is to-day a powerful factor used for the express purpose of 
helping humanity on to higher planes of intellectual development 
throughout the whole world, verifying the statements of our rituals 
in respect to its universality. Those sublime Truths and Ethics were in 
existence thousands of years before Egypt was populated by colonization 
from the " Land of the Vedas." Those colonists dominated the valley of 



536 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

the Nile by subjugating the primitive inhabitants, and decorating the 
banks of that mighty river Nile with most magnificent tombs, temples, 
splendid monuments and sculptures. Far back in the hoary ages of 
antiqiiity, in the dim dawn of approaching civilization, at which period 
fact and fiction were intimately blended to suit the capacity of the people, 
they strived to arouse the latent potential spiritual forces lying dormant 
like a precious jewel deep down iu the heart of every living human being, 
helping them on to a knowledge of Light and Truth. 

Mau}^ of those glorious Truths are to be found to-day pictured upon 
nearl}^ all the tombs and temples of both India and Egypt. The}' are 
indelibly inscribed in hieroglyphic characters throughout the whole of the 
" Land of the Pharaohs,'" the land of mighty monuments and most stu- 
pendous specimens of cyclopean architecture. Many of these have been 
very difficult to understand, and for what purpose they were erected, and 
to-day upon their stou}' sides people look with bowed heads in awe and 
admiration. Their onl}' history in many instances is carved upon those 
ston}' sides or the interior chambers. But in those stupendous pyramids 
that adorn the plains of Gizeh, and the Labyrinth at the Fayum, we can 
only diml}' sense the intents and purposes for which they were erected, 
I do not dare to be more explicit regarding these most extraordinary 
monuments, but of one thing let me assure 3'ou, the great Pyramid was 
never intended for a '' corn-bin," as some authorities have asserted. Both 
these most extraordinary monuments have stood for ages, silent and 
impressive, like the couchant Sphinx whose stony lips are sealed, 
and we are left in doubt as to the unsolved riddle. This monolithic 
monster represents a King and symbolizes the union of intellect and 
Power. 

]\Iurray informs us that " old Arab writers speak of it as a talisman 
to keep the sand awa}' from the cultivated ground ; and tradition at one 
time sa3's that it was mutilated by a fanatical sheik in the fourteenth cen- 
tury, and that since then the sand had made great encroachments. ' Cer- 
tainlj- in Abd el-Latif's time it appears not to have been disfigured as he 
speaks of the face as ' very beautiful,' and of the mouth as ' graceful and 
lovely, and as it were, smiling graciousl}-,' and adds that the red color was 
quite bright and fresh. B3' the Arabs of the present day it is known as 
Abu U-hol (the Father of Terror)." 




X 

z 

X 
CL 
CO 



< 

LU 

or 
o 

Ld 

X 

I- 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 537 

It still lies nearly smothered beneath the drifting sands of the desert, 
looking to the East, watching the glorious constellations and signs of the 
Zodiac come and go, and the twinkling stars, whose radiant eyes peep out 
of the azure vault above from before the misty veil that guards the portals 
of eternal day. Yet still it lies crouching there, mute, dumb, but eloquent 
in its silent majesty, ever watching the endless centuries roll along the 
stream of time. It catches the dawning light of the glorious Sun-god J?a, 
and reflects it back in farewell benedictions to humanity, who stand watch- 
ing and waiting from afar off the coming dawn of intellectual advancement, 
and true spiritual unfoldment, looking for the time when they will be 
enabled to lift their hands to its glorious light. 

These stupendous tombs and temples of ancient Egypt, whose ruins 
are to be found throughout the length and breadth of this most wonderful 
valley of the river Nile, were most certainly never used for public wor- 
ship, nor were the masses of the people ever admitted to observe the 
sacred rites and ceremonies that were performed by the King, or priests, 
during their initiative services. All that took place within the walls of 
these majestic temples was most assuredly well guarded from the prying 
eyes of the profane. It was only upon certain occasions, such as Initia- 
tion into the Greater Mysteries, or on certain days, that were set apart 
for the honoring of the local gods of the Nome or city, that they observed 
these local ceremonies. At such times the King clothed in most gorgeous 
vestments, followed by priests and ofiicials of the temple carrying the 
divine images and flaunting banners, burning incense and chanting 
hymns, marched in a grand procession through the pillared halls and 
corridors. Very often they circled around the immense roof of the temple, 
and passed on through the sacred groves within the massive walls that 
inclosed them, then down to the sacred lake where certain ceremonies 
were performed, returning to the sanctuaries within the depths of the 
temple. 

At such times, possibly from the distance, the populace might be 
enabled to catch a glimpse of the gorgeous pageantry, as the procession 
passed around the roof of the temple, but that was all. They never knew 
what took place within those walls ; to them it was all a profound mys- 
tery. They were most certainly never allowed to participate in any of 
those most mysterious rites and ceremonies, in fact none were permitted 



538 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

to enter into the ranks of the procession, and assist in those sacred 
rites, but those of royal birth, priest, officials, and the Initiates of the 
Greater Mysteries. Here in these temples, upon the banks of the river 
Nile, were performed those profound, sublime, and awe-inspiring cere- 
monies, that have been spoken of and referred to, by the most eminent 
men of every age of the world's history. 

These ancient Egyptian temples were used for the express purpose 
of preparation and initiation of candidates into the sublime and profound 
ceremonies of the Egyptian Mysteries. They were never used, as I 
have stated above, for public worship ; of that we are positively certain. 
The interior of these most magnificent fabrics was fit<"ed up with cham- 
bers, etc., wherein was stored the gorgeous robes, and paraphernalia 
used in the solemn initiatory services of those Rites for which Egypt 
was so noted. Some of these chambers were used for sacerdotal privacy, 
others for the preparation of the aspiring candidate into those most pro- 
found, supremely beautiful and awe-inspiring ceremonies. 

There were a large number of othor rooms and chambers used for 
different purposes, as well as large halls for processional services, and 
for actual .initiation. Within these vast inclosures were sacred groves 
and lakes, that I have referred to above, each and every part of which 
were most assuredly used for some special purpose during the cere- 
monies of Initiation. When the Neophyte passed from the Lesser, into 
the Greater Mysteries, and received the Ineffable degrees, he began to 
realize that there was something more in it than a mere word, grip, token, 
and whispering meaningless phrases into a dead ear. In passing through 
the passages of the Pyramid we have to assume a croixching position and 
sioop low^ very low. Many things are learned in examining these Pyra- 
mids and temples, not only of the Symbolic degrees, but of the Royal 
Arch as well. The things that are taught in the York Rites, we shall 
find, have a far deeper significance than is generally understood, by even 
those who perform and assist in the ceremonies of these degrees.' 

The true meaning of the various S3'mbols are not fully explained to 
the candidate, and I am sorry to say that a great deal of the work that is 
done by those conferring the degrees, in our Symbolic Lodges, is seldom 
or ever properly understood. Even the principal officers who superintend 
the conferring of the degrees upon the aspiring candidate do not fully 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 539 

comprehend their import for the simple reason, they do not, as I have 
said thoroughly understand the true meaning themselves. They have 
the ritualistic work all right, and parrot-like, they are enabled to roll it 
off in eloquent phraseology, bitf Rittialism is 7iot Masonry. 

The deeper meaning, and profound knowledge that is contained in 
our most sublime, and glorious symbols, they do not, nor cannot under- 
stand, until, by deep earnest stud}', and profound meditation, they are 
enabled to comprehend them. They will most assuredly learn that the 
key note to the esoteric meaning of the Symbolic degrees is a thorough 
understanding of the first, or E. A. 

Let me once again explain to you, my dear Brothers, that no man 
can ever acquire even a knowledge of mathematics without a thorough 
comprehension of Addition, Substraction, Multiplication, and Division, 
so it is with our glorious symbology of the first three degrees. Learn 
them, and understand them, and you will have the key that will lead you 
on to the discovery and solution of the most profound esoteric Truths that 
lie concealed in the glorious symbols of our Illustrous Fraternitj'. It 
will teach 3'ou the true meaning of " to travel in foreign countries and 
receive Master's wages," you will discover the " Lost word." It will 
reveal to you the true significance of the discovery of the stone that was 
rejected, and lost in the nibbish of the temple. It will explain to 3'ou 
the meaning of a square man, the temple of Solomon and the rebuilding 
of the temple. In fact all things will be made plain to you, and you will 
come to an understanding of your Higher Self, which knowledge will 
bring you in closer communion with your God, when you will positively 
understand and know that you and your Father are One. 

The Secret Doctrine informs us that the King's Chamber in the 
Greater Pyramid, in the plains of Gizeh, was the H0I3' of Holies. " On 
the days of the mysteries of Initiation, the Candidate, representing the 
Solar God, had to descend into the Sarcophagus, and represent the ener- 
gizing ray, entering into the fecund womb of nature. Emerging from it 
on the following morning, he typified the resurrection of Life after the 
change called Death. In the Great Mysteries his figurative " death " 
lasted two days, when with the Sun he arose on the third morning, after a 
last night of cruel trials. While the Postulant represented the Sun — the 
all-vivifying orb that 'resurrects' every morning but to impart life to all — 



540 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

the Sarcophagus was symbolic of the female principle in Egypt. Its form 
and shape changed with every country, provided it remained a vessel, a 
symbolic ' nevis,' or boat-shaped vehicle, and a 'container' symbolically, 
of germs or the germ life. In India it is the ' Golden ' Cow through 
which the Candidate for Brahmanism has to pass if he desires to be a 
Brahman, and to become Dvi-ja born a second time." 

It is positively asserted by certain writers that the various temples 
throughout the valley of the Nile were used for the express purpose of 
Initiation into the Ancient Egyptian IMysteries, and every thoughtful 
student will recognize this fact, if he will carefully examine them, as I 
have done. 

Baedeker in his Upper Egypt, beginning at page 59, gives a very 
careful description of the temple of Seti I [T/ic Memnoiiiuiii of Abydos)^ 
which will be of Sfreat interest to the Masonic Student. He ooes into 
details in reference to the Rites and Ceremonies that w^ere performed 
therein, as well as in honor of the Divine Deceased (Osiris), whose name 
even the Great Herodotus shrank from breathing. The ancient Indian 
Mysteries, from which source all the others originated, were originally 
conferred upon the initiates in those cave temples for which that country 
is so celebrated, such as Elephanta, Ellora, Karli and man}- others which 
have been cut out of verj- hard porphyry rock, so far as the first three 
are concerned. 

Let me quote 3'ou from "Morals and Dogmas," page 361: "The 
Indian Mysteries were celebrated in subterranean caverns and grottos hewn 
in the solid rock ; and the Initiates adored the Deity, symbolized by the 
Solar Fire. The candidate, long wandering in darkness, truh^ wanted 
Light, and the worship taught him was the worship of God, the Source 
of Light. The vast Temple of Elephanta, perhaps the oldest in the 
world, hewn out of the solid rock, whose very large halls were used for 
Initiations ; as were the still vaster caverns of Salsette with their three 
hundred apartments. 

" The periods of initiation were regulated by the increase and decrease 
of the moon. The mysteries were divided into four steps or degrees. 
The Candidate might receive the first at eight years of age, when he was 
invested with the zennar (cable tow-). Each degree dispensed something 
of perfection, 'Let the wretched man,' says the Hitopadesa, 'practice 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 541 

virtue, whenever he enjoys one of the three or four religious degrees ; let 
him be even minded with all created things, and that disposition will be 
the source of virtue.' 

" After various ceremonies, chiefl}' relating to the Unity, and Trinity 
of the Godhead, the Candidate was clothed in a linen garment without a 
seam, remained under the care of a Brahmin until he was twenty years 
of age, constantl}' studying and practicing the most rigid virtue. Then 
he underwent the severest probation for the second degree, in which he 
was sanctified by the sign of the cross, which, pointing to the four quar- 
ters of the compass, was honored as a striking symbol of the universe bv 
many nations of antiquity, and was imitated by the Indians in the shape 
of their temples. 

" Then he was admitted to the Hoi}"- Cavern, blazing with light, 
where in costly robes, sat, in the East, West and South, the three chief 
Hierophants, representing the Indian triune Deit}-. The ceremonies 
there commenced with an anthem to the Great God of Nature, and then 
followed this apostrophe : O mighty being greater than Brahma ! we bow 
down before Thee as the primal Creator ! Eternal God of Gods ! The 
World's Mansion ! Thou art the Incorruptible Being, distinct from all 
things transient ! Thou art before all Gods, the x\ncient Absolute Exist- 
ence, and the Supreme Supporter of the Universe ! Thou art the Supreme 
Mansion; and by Thee, O Infinite Form the Universe was spread abroad. 

" The Candidate thus taught the first great primitive truth, was 
called upon to make a formal declaration, that he would be tractable and 
obedient to his superiors ; that he would keep his bod}^ pure ; govern his 
tongue, and observe a passive obedience in receiving the doctrines and 
traditions of the Fraternity; and the firmest secrecy in maintaining invi- 
olable its hidden and abstruse mysteries. Then he was sprinkled with 
water {whence our baptism) ; certain words, now unknown were whispered 
in his ear ; and he was divested of his shoes and made to go three times 
around the cavern. Hence our three circuits ; hence we were neither 
barefoot nor shod : and the words were the Passwords of that Indian 
degree." 

In these Ancient Mysteries of India the principal officers represented 
the Tri-miirti — Brahma, Vishnu and Siva — the Hindu Trinity which 
furnished the Hebrew Triad of Sephira, Chockma and Binah. Brahma 



542 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

in the Indian mysteries represents the rising sun, the Creator and Con- 
tainer of the other two, rising into life and definition ; Vishnu the Pre- 
server and Conserver of all ; and Siva the Destroyer and Transformer, 
thus forming a triangle of Creation, Preservation and Transformation. 
Brahma the Master, rising into Life, represents the Sun in the east; 
Vishnu in the south, the Junior Warden, the Preserver and Giver ; Siva 
the Senior Warden, the Destroyer and Transformer; who transforms 
Light into Darkness, or day into night. During the ceremonies the 
candidate was baptized, and allegorically reborn, when he was taught to 
lead a true and purer life not only in thought, but in act. 

The ceremonies of initiation were generally performed at midnight, 
in immense caverns amid darkness and gloom. Manj' of them were 
awful and appalling, for the candidate, in his journey through those 
terrible subterranean vaults and passages, was compelled to battle for his 
verj' life against the powers of Darkness, from which, if he succeeded, he 
came forth into Light, Life and Joy, when he was exalted and glorified. 
The Persians, like the Druids, built no temples, but worshipped in large 
circular enclosures the Sun God ]\Iithras. The places wherein they 
adored the -Sun were formed of immense blocks of unhewn stone, very 
much like those Druidical remains at Stonehenge, of Salisbury plains, 
England. 

The Persians abominated images of any kind, and they considered 
that Fire was the only fit emblem of the Deity. From these people the 
Hebrews borrowed the idea and represented God as a flame of fire, which 
appeared to both Abraham and Moses, at Horeb and Mount Sinai. Both 
the Persian and Hebrew Lawgivers claim to have conversed with God, 
maintaining that the Deity instructed them in a system of pure worship, 
which was to be promulgated and taught to all those who were worthy to 
receive such exalted Truths, and who would devote themselves to the 
stud};- of this higher and purer Philosophy. Zoroaster, or Zarathustra, 
soon became famous and his philosophical teachings brought to him, 
from all parts of the civilized world, the most eminent men who lived in 
that age, men who were anxious to improve themselves, by studj'ing 
under a man whose name and fame had spread among the learned men 
throughout the four corners of the earth. I am referring to the ancient 
Persians, and to the time when first Zarathustra Spitama came forward as 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 543 

a reformer and leader of his people, long before the flight of the Israelites 
out of the " Land of Egypt." It is very difficult to find the exact date of 
his birth, or when he lived, but according to the best modern authorities 
we might place it anywhere between 2000 to 1000 b. c. 

According to the most ancient Gat has (Psalms) Zarathustra pro- 
claimed himself " the reciter of the hymns, the messenger of Ahura- 
Mazda, the listener to the sacred words revealed by God." The name 
Zarathustra is a rather peculiar one, and in the language of those ancient 
people, it refers to some peculiar kind of a " camel," but of what species 
we are unable to determine. The Greeks transformed it into Zoroaster. 
William Jackson, Professor of Indo-Iranian Languages, Columbia Uni- 
versity, places the date of his birth in the seventh centur}^ b. c, while Pro- 
fessor James T. Bixby, Ph. D., states that " the best modern authorities 
say from 2000 to 1200 B. c." But leaving the date of his birth out of the 
question, we know that he clothed himself in white priestly vestments, 
and assembled the people around the sacred Fire, and delivered an inaug- 
ural address, calling upon them to listen to the Words of Ahnra Mazda, 
the ever living God, who speaks to them through him, by and with the 
holy flame of the sacred fire. In the early days of their history they 
worshipped and performed their initiatory ceremonies, into the Mazdean 
Mysteries, in immense caves fitted up expressly for that purpose. The 
grand final to these Mysteries was the triumph of Ormuzd, the Sun God, 
over the powers of Darkness. 

I shall quote freely from our revered Brother Albert Pike throughout 
this chapter, because his ideas and mine are identical, in relation to 
the Ancient Mysteries. '' Everywhere in the old Mysteries, and in all 
the symbolisms and ceremonial of the Hierophant was found the same 
mythical personages, who like Hermes, or Zoroaster, unites Human Attri- 
butes with divine, and is himself the God whose worship Tie introduced, 
teaching rude men the commencement of civilization, through the influ- 
ence of song, and connecting with the symbol of his death emblematic of 
that Nature, the most essential consolation of religion. 

" The Mysteries embraced the three great doctrines of Ancient 
T/ieosophy. They treated of God, Man and Nature. Dionusos, whose 
Mysteries Orpheus is said to have founded, was the God of Nature, or of 
the moisture which is the life of Nature, who prepares in darkness the 



544 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

return of life and vegetation, or who is himself the Light and Change 
evolving their varieties. He was Theologically one with Hermes, Pro- 
metheus and Poseidon. 

" In the ^gean Islands he is Butes, Dardanus, Himeros, or Imbros. 
In Crete he appears as lesius or Zeus, whose worship remaining unveiled 
by the usual forms of myster}^, betrayed to profane curiosity the symbols 
which, if irreverently contemplated, were sure to be misunderstood. In 
Asia he is the long-stoled Bassareus coalescing with the Sabazius of the 
Phrygian Corybantes: the same with the mystic lacchus, nursling or son 
of Ceres, and with the dismembered Zagreus, son of Persephone. In 
symbolical forms the m3'steries exhibited the THE ONB, of which the 
Manifold is an infinite illustration, containing a moral lesson calculated 
to guide the soul through life, and to cheer it in death. 

" The story of Dionusos was profoundly significant. He was not 
only creator of the world, but guardian, liberator, and Saviour of the 
soul. God of the many-colored mantle, he was the resulting manifesta- 
tion personified, the all in the many, the varied year life passing into 
innumerable forms. 

'■ The- spiritual regeneration of Man was typified in the Mysteries by 
the second birth of Dionusos as offspring of the highest ; and the agents 
and s}'mbols of that regeneration were the elements that effected Nature's 
periodical purification — the air, indicated by the mystic fan or winnow ; 
the fire, signified by the torch ; and the baptismal water, for water is not 
only cleanser of all things, but the genesis or source of all. 

" Socrates says in the Phsedo : ' It well appears that those who 
established the mj'steries, or secret assemblies of the Initiated, were no 
contemptible personages, but men of great genius, who in the early ages 
strove to teach us, under enigmas, that he who shall go into the invisible 
regions without being purified, will be precipitated into the abj^ss ; while 
he who arrives there, purged of the stains of this world, and accomplished 
in virtue, will be admitted to the dwelling place of the Deity.' ' Initiation 
was a school in which were taught the truths of primitive revelation, the 
existence and attributes of One God, the Immortality of the Soul, 
rewards and punishments not onl}' in this but in a future life, the 
phenomena of Nature, the Arts, the Sciences, Morality, Legislature, 
Philosophy, Philanthropy, Ps3^chology, Metaphysics, Animal Magnetism, 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 545 

Telepathy and all Occult Sciences. Public odium was cast on those who 
were refused Initiation, and they were considered unworthy of public 
employment or private confidence, and were known as the profane, and 
were held in abhorrence and believed to be doomed to everlasting punish- 
ment. Bastards and slaves were excluded from initiation ; and so were the 
Materialists or Epicurians, who denied the existence of the Supreme 
Architect of the Universe, and consequenth^ the utility of Initiation. 

" Eventually it came to be considered that the gates of Elysium 
would open onl}^ for the Initiates whose souls had been purified and 
regenerated in the sanctuaries or Holy of Holies. It was thoroughly 
understood that salvation or redemption was not to be obtained through 
Initiation alone, for Plato informs us that 'it was also necessar)'' for the 
Soul to be purified from every sin ; and the purification necessary was 
such as gave virtue, truth, wisdom, strength, justice and temperance.' 

" The object of the ancient initiations being to ameliorate mankind 
and to perfect the intellectual part of man, the nature of the human soul, 
its origin, its destination, its relations to the body and to universal nature, 
all formed part of the mystic science ; and to them in part the lessons 
given to the initiate were directed. For it was believed that initiation 
tended to his perfection, and to preventing the divine part within him, 
overloaded with matter gross and earthy, from being plunged into gloom, 
and impeded in its return to the Deity. 

" The Soul with them was not a mere conception or abstraction ; but 
a reality including in itself life and thought ; or, rather, of whose essence 
it was to live and think. It was material ; but not brute, inert, inactive, 
lifeless, motionless, formless, lightless matter. It was held to be active, 
reasoning, thinking, its natural home in the highest regions of the 
universe, whence it descended to illuminate, give form and movement to 
vivify, animate, and carry with itself the baser matter; and whither it 
unceasingly tends to reascend, when, and as soon as it can free itself 
from its connection with the matter. From that substance, divine, 
infinitely delicate and active, essentially luminous, the Souls of men were 
formed, and by it alone, uniting with and organizing their bodies, 
men lived.'''' 

This was the doctrine of Pythagoras, who learned it when he 
received the Egyptian Mysteries, and was the doctrine of all who by 
35 



546 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

means of the ceremonial of Initiation, thought to purify the soul. Virgil 
makes the spirit of Anchises teach it to ^neas : and all the expiations 
and lustrations used in the mysteries were but symbols of those intel- 
lectual ones by which the soul was to be purged of its vice-spots and 
stains, and freed of the incumbrance of its earthly prison, so that it 
might rise unimpeded to the source from whence it came. Hence sprang 
the doctrine of transmigration of souls ; which Pythagoras taught as an 
allegory, and those who came after him received literally. 

Plato, like him, drew his doctrines from the East and the mysteries, 
and undertook to translate the language of the symbols used there, into 
Philosophy ; and to prove by argument and philosophical deduction what 
felt by the consciousness, the mysteries taught by symbols, as an 
indisputable fact— the Immortality of the Soul. Cicero did the same, and 
followed the mysteries in teaching that the Gods were but mortal men, 
who for their great virtues and signal services had deserved that their 
souls should, after death, be raised to that lofty rank. It being taught in 
the mysteries, by way of allegory, the meaning of which was not made 
known except to a select few, or, perhaps only at a later day, as an actual 
reality, that .the souls of the vicious dead passed into the bodies of those 
animals to whose nature their vices had most affinity. It was also taught 
that the Soul could avoid these transmigrations, often successive and 
numerous, by the practice of virtue, which would acquit it of them, free it 
from the circle of successive generations and restore it at once to its 
source. Hence, nothing was so ardently prayed for by the initiator, says 
Proclus, as this happy fortune, which delivering them from the empire of 
evil, would restore them to their true life, and conduct them to the place 
of final rest. 

This doctrine probably referred to those figures of animals and 
monsters which were exhibited to the Initiate, before allowing him to see 
the sacred light for which he sighed. I have already spoken upon this 
subject of Transmigration in the XIII Chapter of this work, dnd will 
only say — that once man has received the Divine light of Reason he 
could never retrograde, or go back into the lower animal kingdom. The 
Initiates into the Greater Mysteries were never taught any such idea ; 
but they may have been told that if a man did not live a pure life on this 
earth, but pandered to his animal, passional nature, he would be reborn. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 547 

with the attributes of the lower animals, such as the cunning of the fox, 
or the ferocity of the tiger, and this assertion is borne out by many of the 
Initiates themselves, for instance : 

Hierocles, one of the most enthusiastic and celebrated followers of 
Pythagoras, emphatically asserts that " he who believes that the soul of 
man, after his death, will enter the body of a beast for his vices, or 
become a plant for his stupidity, is deceived ; and is absolutely ignorant 
of the eternal form of the soul, which can never change ; for, always 
remaining man, it is said to become God or beast, through virtue or vice ; 
though it can become neither one nor the other by nature, but solely by 
resemblance of its inclinations to theirs." 

Again Timoeus of Locria, another of the Pythagorean school of 
Philosoph}^ and an Initiate, tells us that " in order to alarm men, and 
prevent them from committing crimes, they menaced them with strong 
humiliations and punishments ; even declaring that their souls would 
pass into new bodies — that of a coward into the body of a deer ; that of a 
ravisher into the body of a wolf; that of a murderer into the bodj' of some 
still more ferocious animal : and that of an impure sensualist into the 
body of a hog." 

The more we force our investigations into the older forms of prehis^ 
toric civilizations, and the religions and philosophies that pertained to 
them, the more beautiful, grand and sublime will those teachings that 
permeated them appear to us. We shall eventually discover that the 
great majority of those ancient peoples worshipped the ever living God 
under the symbol of the Sun, recognizing the fact, that thej' possessed a 
wonderful knowledge of Astronomy. The Arts and Sciences were thor- 
oughly comprehended by them, and that there was a wonderful resem- 
blance between the doctrines and worship of these ancient peoples. We 
are positively certain that the Mysteries of India, Chaldea, Assyria, 
Phoenicia and other countries were thoroughly known and comprehended 
by the Hierophants of Ancient Egypt, who instructed their initiates in 
all the profound Truths that pertained to the Greater Mysteries. 

Each and every one who passed into the sanctuaries of these temples 
for initiation, were bound by the most terrible oaths, before they were 
even permitted to see, or know, anything at all whatever about the 
ceremonies they had to pass through. After they had seen the Light, 



548 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

they were then considered to be bound by a stronger tie, and were then 
permitted to perform their lustrations. They were then conducted into 
the regular iuitiatory ceremonials, where they underwent terrible ordeals 
and tremendous trials, both physically and mentally, before they were 
instructed in the sublime and glorious Truths and Wisdom which 
unfolded to them the proof of the Immortality of the Soul, the Reincarna- 
tion of the Spirit and the Doctrine of a Future Life, as well as the true 
meaning of raising horizontals to perpendiculars ipon the five points of 
felloiuship. 

There are a great many Brothers, who firmly believe that the Blue 
Lodge, or Symbolic degrees, contain the whole of Masonry ; but this 
assertion most assuredly proves that they have not delved very deep into 
the symbology of those first three degrees, or they would never make 
such an assertion. The first three rules of Arithmetic are the foundation 
of the science of numbers or Mathematics. But these first three rules do 
not demonstrate the higher branches of Mathematics, such as Proportion, 
Square root, Conic sections. Algebra, etc. Neither do these first three 
rules in themselves demonstrate the mutations and collocations that sfo to 
instruct us in those Higher branches of the " Exact Sciences^ 

The seven notes of our scale in Music contain the whole of the 
demonstrated harmony of the Great Masters, but not until the combina- 
tions and collocations have been made do they produce the thoughts of 
the Masters in divine Harmony. In the same way the Blue or Symbolic 
degrees are only the foundation upon which have been erected the Higher 
Degrees of the York and our own beloved Scottish Rite. 

It is stated in " Morals and Dogmas," page 819, " The symbols of the 
wise always become the idols of the ignorant multitude. The Blue 
Degrees are but the outer court or portico of the Temple. Part of the 
symbols are displayed there to the Initiate, but he is intentionally misled 
by false interpretations. It is not intended that he shall understand them ; 
but it is intended that he shall imagine he understands them. Their true 
explication is reserved for the Adepts, the Princes of IMasonry. The 
whole body of the Royal and Sacerdotal Art was hidden so carefully, 
centuries since, in the High Degrees as that it is even yet impossible to 
solve many of the enigmas which they contain. It is well enouo-h for the 
mass of those called Masons to imagine that all is contained in the Blue 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 549 

Degrees ; and whoso attempts to undeceive them will labor in vain, and 
without any true reward violate his obligations as an Adept. Masonry is 
the veritable Sphinx, buried to the head in the sands heaped around it by 
the ages." 

Our revered Brother Albert Pike has frequently written upon the 
first three degrees of Masonry, and his comparison of their being like the 
" broken columns of a roofless Druidic Temple in their rude and mutilated 
greatness " is perfectly correct, and every earnest student who will care- 
fully examine the Symbolic degrees will most assuredly recognize their 
mutilated condition, and he will find that there is nothing complete or 
perfect in them. Even that which our candidate looks forward to has 
been lost, and he is given a substitute until future generations shall dis- 
cover the lost one. 

Yes, my dear Brothers, the first three degrees contain the whole of 
Masonry TO him v^^ho knows. How I wish that I could talk to you and 
explain this seeming mystery, but as it is I can only hint at these things 
which I would like you to thoroughly understand. I have previously 
asserted, and I earnestly desire that you should comprehend that Ritual- 
ism IS NOT Masonry, for //la/ may be changed at any time b^^ the Grand 
Lecturers. But Masonry with its sublime and profound philosophies that 
have descended to us from the Wisdom Religion, through the Ancient 
Mysteries, is the same to-day and forever. 

Her traditions carr}^ us back to the most remote ages of antiquity, 
back beyond the dim dawn of prehistoric civilization, long before the 
hieratic inscriptions of Ancient Egypt were carved and painted within 
the tombs and temples throughout that wondrous Valley of the Nile. 
These to-day are, in many instances, undecipherable on account of the 
begrimed condition of the ceilings, walls, etc., and the vandal hands of 
the bigoted Christians, who mutilated so many of these temples, and to 
whom I have previously referred. Brother J. D. Buck, 32°, in "Mystic 
Masonry" (Introduction, VI e^ seq.) states that: 

" Masonry deals largely with the Ethics and Symbolism of the 
Ancient Mysteries. The writer believes that through the well-timed 
efforts of Masons to-day, the grandest achievements in knowledge ever 
gained by man, which were originally concealed in the Greater Mysteries 
of Antiquity and in time became lost to the world, may be again recovered. 



550 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

In the strictest sense, this knowledge has never really been lost, as there 
have always existed those who were possessed of the Great Secret. It 
was originally veiled in order to conceal it from the profane, and written 
in a universal language of Symbolism, that the wise among all nations 
and throughout all time might read it, as it were, in their own language. 
It was also written in parable and allegory so that the unlettered and com- 
mon people might not be deprived of its wise precepts, and of its force in 
shaping character, dissipating ignorance, and inspiring hope. This 
Ancient Wisdom is the. fountain from which Masonry takes its rise. The 
true Science of Symbolism in time became lost ; the Temples of Initia- 
tion fell into decay, or were destroyed by priests, and potentates, jealous 
of their influence. For many weary centuries men have been trying to 
recover the lost key, and to restore the ancient wisdom from the parables 
and allegories in which it had been concealed. But progress in the 
inverse order is not only necessarily slow and uncertain, but all such 
attempts have, more or less, given rise to fantastic flights of the imagina- 
tion, and resulted in confusion, rather than in enlightenment. The 
result has been to bring the whole subject under contempt, and to make 
the name " Mysticism " mean something vague and uncertain, if not 
altogether foolish to those ignorant of its true meaning." 

The causes that have led up to the re-veiling of the Ancient Wisdom 
and Masonic Symbols have been many ; some of which I have previously 
mentioned, such as Christian bigotry, ignorant fanaticism, misinterpreta- 
tions and alterations, by those v/lio desired to change the hieroglyphical 
inscriptions and symbols in order to suit their own ends and further 
their own designs. I have spoken about the destruction of the hiero- 
glyphic inscriptions and sculptures in many of the temples throughout 
the " Land of Egypt." ' 

" The Secret Doctrine " informs us in the Introduction to the " New 
Edition," page 24, Vol. I, as follows : " However superhuman the efforts 
of the early Christian Fathers to obliterate the Secret Doctrine from the 
very memory of man, they all failed. Truth can never be killed ; hence 
the failure to sweep away entirely from the face of the earth every vestige 
of that ancient Wisdom, and to shackle and gag every witness who 
testified to it. Let one only think of the thousands, perhaps millions of 
MSS. burnt ; of rnonuments with their too indiscreet inscriptions and 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 551 

pictorial symbols, pulverized to dust ; of the bands of early hermits, and 
ascetics roaming about among the ruined cities of Upper and Lower 
Egypt, in desert and mountain, valley and highland, seeking for and 
eager to destroy every obelisk and pillar, scroll or parchment they could 
lay their hands on, if only it bore the symbols of the Tau, or any other 
sign borrowed and appropriated by the new faith — and he will then see 
plainly how it is that so little has remained of the records of the past. 
Verily, the fiendish spirit of fanatacism of early mediaeval Christianity 
and of Islam, has loved from the first to dwell in darkness and ignorance 
rather than Light and TritthP 

I have repeatedly asserted, in this work, that I do most sincerely and 
firmly believe that the esoteric teachings of our glorious Fraternity origi- 
nated in the " Land of the \'edas, and that every careful Masonic student 
will bear me out in this assertion, because they can by thorough investi- 
gation, trace all knowledge to this one source. I also firmly believe that 
the Wisdom Religion originated in the Great Lodge of Adepts and Per- 
fect Masters who created it, and sent it echoing down the drifting cen- 
turies, where at times it has during the past, and even in our present 
Era, been hidden, in a measure, from our view, through like causes that 
I have already explained above. The very essence and aroma of the 
ancient teachings of the Indian, Mazdean, and Egj^ptian Religions ema- 
nated from this great primal fount : The Ancient Wisdom Religion. 

The real meaning of the great majority of our Masonic symbols, 
contains some of the most sublime Truths that were ever taught. To 
all those who were initiated and passed into the sanctuaries of the Temple 
these Truths will ever remain. Let me quote you once more the 
"Secret Doctrine" Introductory, Vol. I, page 27 : "One more import- 
ant point must be noticed, one that stands foremost in the series of 
proofs given of the existence of one primeval, universal Wisdom — at 
any rate for Christians, Kabalists and students. The teachings were, at 
least, partially known to several of the Fathers of the Church. It is 
maintained on purely historical grounds, that Origen, Synesius, and even 
Clemens Alexandrinus, had themselves been initiated into the mysteries 
before adding to the Neo-Platonism of the Alexandrian school, that of the 
Gnostics, under the Christian veil. More than this, some of the doc- 
trines of the sacred schools, though by no means all, were preserved in 



552 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

the Vatican, and have since become part and parcel of the Mysteries, in 
the shape of disfigured additions made to the original Christian pro- 
gram by the Latin Church. Such is now the materialized dogma of 
the Immaculate Conception. This accounts for great persecutions set 
on foot by the Roman Catholic Church against Occultism, Masonry and 
heterodox Mysticism generally. 

" The days of Constantine were the last turning point in history, 
the period of the supreme struggle, that ended in the Western world 
throttling the old religions in favor of the new one, built on their bodies. 
From thence the vista into the far distant past, beyond the Deluge 
and the Garden of Eden, began to be forcibly and relentlessly shut out by 
every fair and unfair means from the indiscreet gaze of posterity. Every 
issue was blocked up, every record upon which hands could be laid 
destroyed. Yet there remains enough, even among such mutilated 
records to warrant us in saying that there is in them every requisite 
evidence of a Parent Doctrine. Fragments have survived geological 
cataclysms, to tell the story ; and every survival shows evidences that 
the now secret Wisdom was once the fountain head, the ever-flowing 
perennial source, from which were fed all the streamlets — the later 
religions of all nations — from the first down to the last. This period, 
beginning with Buddha and Pythagoras at the one end and finishing with 
the Neo-Platonists, and Gnostics at the other, is the only focus left in 
History wherein converge for the last time the bright rays of light 
streaming from the ^ons of times gone by, unobscured by the hand of 
bigotry and fanatacism." 

What the world has lost through the bigotry, fanatacism and intoler- 
ance of the early Church Fathers will never be fully realized by the 
present generation, but there is one very great satisfaction to all, and that 
is the Key to the solution has never been lost and the Light of the 
Ancient Wisdom will come forth once again, from the misty veil that 
enshrouds it, for the benefit of the human race. Masoniy, the lineal 
descendant of the Ancient Mysteries^ contains that Key in her Synibology, 
but in order that we may be thoroughly enabled to fully compi-ehend the 
sublimity and grandeur of these parables and allegories that are illus- 
trated by symbols, we must work very carefully and zealously, and be 
guided by rules of analogy and correspondence. Then we shall find that 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 553 

our researches will lead us on to a knowledge of those sublime and glorious 
Truths that laid the foundation of the Indian, Mazdean and Eg37ptian 
Mysteries, afterwards ramified through the Chaldean and Babylonian 
Empires. It was from the Babylonian Magi that the ancient Hebrews 
drew their inspiration and Wisdom. 

There is one thing I especially desire to call 3^our attention to, and 
that is, DO NOT T.-\KE THE SYMBOL FOR THE THING SYMBOLIZED. Masomj 
owes a great deal to the Hebrew people^ who have preserved to us a vast 
amount of priceless jewels they received from the Magi. These they have 
ever guarded from the profane and handed dowm to us in signs, symbols 
and records that will never be lost, but will live forever and be easily 
understood by each and every Neophyte who is brought to Light in our 
Lodges of the present day. If any of our most earnest students will 
only give their time and attention to the careful examination of the Kabala 
and have their minds thoroughly illuminated by the Zohar, before they 
attempt to pass an opinion upon the " Mystery Language " of prehis- 
toric ages, the language that is now called Symbolism, they will not only 
discover the Truth of the above assertions, but some of the Light, Know- 
ledge, and Truth that illuminated the minds of the Hierophants of old, 
and also the great Pythagoras who taught in the sanctuaries over which 
they presided, the Wisdom that belonged to the Great Lodge of Adepts of 
India. 

The Secret Doctrine informs us in Volume I, page 325 et seq. — " The 
proofs brought forward in corroboration of the old teachings are scat- 
tered widely throughout the old scriptures of ancient civilization. The 
Piiraiias, the Zend Avesta^ and the old classics are full of such facts; but 
no one has ever taken the trouble of collecting and collating them 
together. The reason for this is that all such events were recorded 
symbolically ; and the best scholars, the most acute minds, among our 
Aryanists and Egyptologists, have been too often darkened by one or 
anothers preconception, and still oftener, by one sided views of the secret 
meaning. Yet even a parable is a spoken symbol, a fiction or a fable, as 
some think ; an allegorical representation, we say, of life realities, events 
and facts. And just as a moral was ever drawn from a parable, such 
moral being an actual truth, and fact in human life, so a historical, real 
event was deduced, by those versed in the hieratic sciences, from emblems 



554 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

and symbols recorded in the archives of the temple. The religious and 
esoteric history of every nation was imbedded in symbols • it was never 
expressed literally in so many words. 

" All the thoughts and emotions, all the learning and knowledge, 
revealed, and acquired, of the early Races, found their pictorial expres- 
sion in allegory and parable. Why ? Because, Oie spoken word has a 
potency not onlv unknown to, but even nnsiLSpeded, and naturally disbelieved 
in, by the modern sages. Because sound and rythm are closely related 
to the four Elements of the Ancients ; and because such or another 
vibration in the air is sure to awaken the corresponding Powers, union 
with which produces good or bad results, as the case may be. No stu- 
dent was ever allowed to recite historical, religious, or real events of any 
kind, in so many unmistakable words, lest the Powers connected with the 
event should be once more attracted. Such events were narrated only 
during Initiation, and every student had to record them in corresponding 
symbols, drawn out of his own mind and examined later by his Master, 
before they were finally accepted. Thus by degrees was the Chinese 
Alphabet created, as just before it the hieratic symbols were fixed 
upon in old Egypt. In the Chinese language, the characters of which 
may be read in any language, and which, as just said, is only a little 
less ancient than the Egyptian alphabet of Thoth, every word has its 
correspending symbol in a pictorial form. This language possesses many 
thousands of such letters or logograms, each conveying the meaning of a 
whole word ; for letters proper as we understand it, do not exist in the 
Chinese language, any more than they did in the Egyptian, till a far 
later period 

" ' Thus a Japanese who does not understand one word of Chinese, 
meeting with a Chinaman who has never heard the language of the 
former, will communicate in writing with him, and thej^ will understand 
each other perfectly — because their writing is symbolical.' . . ., Recent 
discoveries made by great Mathematicians and Kabalists thus prove, 
beyond a shadow of doubt, that every theolog}', from the earliest down to 
the latest, has sprung, not onl}? from a common source of abstract beliefs, 
but one universal Esoteric or Mystery Language. These scholars hold 
the key to the universal language of old, and have turned it successfully, 
though only once, in the hermetically closed door leading to the Hall of 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 555 

Mj'steries. The great archaic sj'stem known from prehistoric ages as the 
sacred Wisdom — Science, one that is contained and can be traced in every 
old as well as in every new religion, had, and still has, its universal 
language — suspected by the Mason Ragon — the language of the Hiero- 
phants, which has seven ' dialects,' so to speak, each referring and being 
specially appropriate, to one of the seven m3^steries of Nature. Bach had 
its own S3nnbolism. Nature could thus be either read in its fulness, or 
viewed from one of its special aspects. 

" The proof of this lies to this day, in the extreme difficulty which 
the Orientalist in general, and the Indianists, and Egyptologists in 
particular, experience in interpreting the Allegorical writings of the 
Aryans, and the hieratic records of old Egypt. This is because the}' will 
never remember that all the ancient records were written in a language 
which was universal, and known to all nations alike in days of old, but 
which is now intelligible onl}' to the few. Like the Arabic figures AA'hich 
are understandable to men of ever}' nation, or like the English word and, 
which becomes r/ for the Frenchman, 7md for the German, and so on, 
yet which may be expressed for all civilized nations in the simple sign & — 
so all the words of that Mystery Language signified the same thing to 
each man, of whatever nationality. There have been several men of note 
who have tried to re-establish such a universal and philosophical tongue. 
Delgarme, Wilkins, Leibnitz ; but Demarmeux, in his Pasigraphic^ is the 
only one who has proven its possibility. The scheme of Valentinius, 
called the ' Greek Kabalah,' based on the combinations of Greek letters, 
might serve as a model. 

" The many sided facts of the Mystery Language have lent to the 
adoption of widely varied dogmas, and rites in the exotericism of the 
church rituals. It is these, again which are at the origin, of most of the 
dogmas of the Christian Church ; for instance, the Seven Sacraments, 
the Trinity, the Resurrection, the Seven Capital Sins, and the Seven Vir- 
tues. The Seven Keys to the Mystery Tongue, however, having always 
been in the keeping of the highest among the initiated Hierophants of 
antiquity ; it is only the partial use of a few out of the seven, which 
passed, through the treason of some early Church Fathers — ex-Initiates 
of the Temples — into the hands of the new sect of the Nazarenes. Some 
of the early Popes were Initiates, but the last fragments of their knowl- 



556 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

edge have now fallen into the power of the Jesuits, who have turned them 
into a system of Sorcery. 

" It is maintained that India — not confined to its present, but includ- 
ing its ancient boundaries — is the onh- countr}- in the world which still 
has among her sons Adepts, who have the knowledge of all the seven 
sub-S3^stems, and the key to the entire system. From the fall of Alem- 
phis, Egvpt began to lose those ke\-s one b}- one, and Chaldea had 
preserved onl}' three in the da3's of Berosus. As for the Hebrews, in all 
their writings the}- show no more than a thorough knowledge of the 
astronomical, geometrical and numerical sj'stems of S3'mbolizing the 
human, and especiall}^ the physiological'functions. They never had the 
higher Ke3's.'" 

Now my dear Brothers and Friends, I do not wish j-ou to think I 
am tr3-ing to introduce something into IMasonry, which does not belong 
there, for every thing I have written, has been placed before 3-ou for 
3-our special investigation, so 3-ou ma3- positivel3^ know that there is 
far more than Grips and Tokens in the beautiful s3-mbols belonging 
to our most Illustrious Fraternit}-. It is in these glorious s3-mbols that 
^ve shall 'find the Ke3- b3- which we ma3- be enabled to unlock the true 
meaning of those sublime philosophies which have commanded the most 
profound attention and admiration of the learned men of ever3- epoch 
of the world's histor3-, and all these profound Truths are open to all 
jMasons who will diligentl}- search and think for themselves. 



J|j)iIaD antr its I\uins-Nul)ia. 



557 



Loud is the sound of ballad-stngci^ shouting, 
ttlbilc, with her wanton grace and paces pretty. 

Like some alluring, sly coquette, 

H dancer with her eastagnettes 
Displays herself in subtle pantomime 
Hnd singers chant an old Hrabian ditty 

Of Saladin and of his time. 

— Freudenburg. 



558 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 559 




CHAPTER XXIV. 

THE GAWAZEE— EXPLORING TEMPLES AND TOMBS— PHIL/E AND ITS 

RUINS-NUBIA. 

HE Thebiad was one of the principal divisions of ancient Egypt, 
and was originally divided into ten nomes. There were ten halls 
in the Labyrinth that were specially allotted to the princes of Upper 
Egypt. It was divided by the river running through its entire length, 
and situated in a narrow valley that was, and is to-da}^, bounded by the 
Arabian hills on the west side, and the Libyan hills and desert on the 
other. It extended north as far as Eshmiinen the Hermopolis Magna of 
the Greeks, and on the south as far as Asjnit or Syene. We talked of 
the ancient glory of this wonderful city of Thebes and realized that it 
was the same old river that ran murmuring by, as when Seti and his son, 
the Great Rameses, beautified and adorned its banks with such wondrous 
works of art. 

The sun shone bright and warm that day, and Memnon still sat 
looking to the east, but his voice was now hushed and his stony lips were 
as silent as the voices of the dead that surrounded him. The risinsf sun 

o 

turned the Libyan hills into red and gold, and the marvellous play of 
colors were indescribable. The sky was just as blue, her fields were still 
marked with bright greens, yellow and brown, and the bean flower still 
shed its fragrance upon the morning air as in the days of old. The 
nights were supremely beautiful, the stars glittered in the azure vault 
above, and the splendid moon shone as beautiful and bright as when this 
majestic hundred-gated Thebes was in the height of her glory, and yet, 
nought but the ruins of this mighty city remain with us to tell of the 
wondrous knowledge that pertained to these warrior kings, and their 
vanished splendor. 

We arose that morning and found a light air astir and Abdallah pre- 
paring to weigh the anchor, but it was not until nearly ten o'clock that 
the wind came out good and strong, our anchor was soon apeak, our big 



560 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

sails loosed and we bid adieu to Thebes. We passed swiftly by the grand 
pylon of Karnak and inside of an hour we drew up towards Erment, and 
very soon moored on the west bank, close to a sugar factory, four hundred 
and sixty-two miles from Cairo, and eight miles from Thebes. It was told 
us that there were some very interesting ruins at that place, but on our 
arrival we lea:rned that they had been entirely destroyed for the purpose 
of building the sugar factor}' there, consequently as there was a light 
wind astir, we went on board again and started off for Eshne, but within 
about eight miles from that place the wind died out, the heat became 
intense and nearly unbearable, and hung like a heavy pall over all. Our 
great sails flapped idly to and fro with the motion of the boat as our 
sailors started out upon the tow path, and struck up their everlasting 
songs once more. We had dinner just as the sun went down, and we sat 
on deck until we saw the lights of Eshne, when we retired, and early the 
next morning we found that our boat was anchored off that place, which 
is located on the west bank of the Nile, four hundred and ninety miles 
from Cairo. This is the site of the old city of Latopolis, and derived its 
name from the Lato fish or Latus, that was worshipped here in the 
sanctuary of this temple. The people of this place claim that Moses was 
born here. It has a population of about ten thousand inhabitants and it 
is the headquarters of the Alme or Gawazee (dancing girls) of whom I 
have already spoken in a previous chapter. 

Warburton, in " Crescent and the Cross," gives an account of the 
Alme, page 208, f/ seg., which I believe will be of interest to you, my 
dear Brothers and readers, it is as follows : " The term Alme, or, in the 
pliiral Awalim^ means literall}', a learned female. This epithet is only 
strictly applicable to singing women, whose music is sometimes of a very 
high order and their accomplishments in other respects so numerous, 
that they frequently obtain fifty guineas from a party for their exhibi- 
tions on one evening. The dancing girls belong to a very inferior order, 
and are termed Gawazee in the language of the country. These women 
used to have a settlement near Cairo, and attended all the marriages and 
other festivities of the beau monde there. The Moollahs, or Moslem 
divines, however, objected to them, not on account of their impropriety, 
but on the plea that the profane eyes of the ' Infidel ' ought not to gaze 
upon the women of the true faith. There was such an agitation raised 




THE GAWAZEE, OR DANCING GIRLS. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 561 

on this subject, that the priests prevailed, and all the Ahne were sent off 
to Eshne, five hundred miles up the river, by way of banishment, where 
they are allowed a small stipend, by the government, to keep them from 
starvation. The effects of this reformation produced frightful results, 
which I cannot allude to here, and Almeism still flourishes everywhere 

outside of the Cairene districts The dress of the Alme is very 

picturesque, and graceful, consisting of a short embroidered jacket fitting 
close, but open in the front, long loose trousers of almost transparent 
silk, a cashmere shawl wrapped round the loins, rather than the waist 
and light elegant turbans of muslin embroidered with gold. Their hair 
flows in dark curls down their shoulders, and glitters with small gold 
coins ; their eyes are deeply but delicately painted with Kohl, which 
gives them a very languishing expression, and a profusion of showy 
ornaments glitters on their unveiled bosoms. 

" When about to commence the Oriental ballet, the Alme exchanges 
this for a yet lighter dress, throws off her slippers and advances to the 
center of the room with a slow step and undulating form, that keep accu- 
rate time to the music of the reed-pipe and the castanets, on which she is 
accompanied by her attendants. She then, after a glance round upon her 
audience, throws herself at once and entirely into the part she intends to 
act ; be it pensive, gay or tragic she seems to know no feeling, but that of 
the passion she represents. In some cases a whole romance is acted ; an 
Arab girl, for instance, she listens at the door of her tent for the sound of 
her lover's horse, she chides his dela}' ; he comes, she expresses her 
delight ; he sinks to sleep, she watches over and dances around him ; he 
departs, she is overwhelmed with grief Generall}' the representation is 
more simple ; the ' Wasp dance ' is a favorite ballet of the latter class : 
the actress is standing musing in a pensive posture, when a wasp is sup- 
posed to fly into her bosom — her girdle — all about her ; the music becomes 
rapid, she flies about in terror, darting her hand all over her person in 
pursuit of the insect, till she finds it was all a mistake ; then smiling she 
expresses her pleasure and her relief in dance." 

We started out to visit the temple of Eshne and found only a portico 

which was surrounded by houses, and the temple proper was covered 

with houses, it being very difficult to tell anything at all about it. The 

portico has been cleared of the rubbish and debris, and we recognized it as 
36 



562 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

belonging to the Roman period, for the cartouches belong to the various 
Roman Emperors. We did not care to stop at Eshne over night, but force 
of circumstances compelled us to remain. There was not a breath of wind 
astir, and Hassan had gone to visit a friend, so we spent that afternoon in 
rambling around the town visiting the bazaars, where we purchased a few 
articles, then went down to our dahabiyeh. After dinner we wrote a few 
letters, arranged our notes, and at night we went up to one of the prin- 
cipal coffee houses, and witnessed some of the dances of the Gawazee 
girls. 

The very first dance was the " Wasp " dance that Warburton 
described, but like all the rest it soon began to express unbridled passion, 
when we turned away in disgust, throwing a few piasters as our offering. 
We strolled off down to our boat, smoked a cigar, and after a chat about 
what we had seen we retired for the night. 

The next morning Salame aroused me from a sound slumber to hand 
me my morning coffee, and as I sat sipping it I looked out through the 
cabin window, and saw that we were under way, and would soon arrive at 
El-Kab, if the wind did not fail us ; but by the time our breakfast was 
ready the wind had left us, and we had a lot of towing to do before reach- 
ing that place. 

As we sat on deck that day we amused ourselves by shooting, and 
we bagged quite a lot of birds, some of which were beautiful specimens, 
and we preserved the skins for future use. We went crawling along 
slowly but surely with our big sails hanging from the yards, swaying 
backward and forward with every motion of the boat. We dropped off 
into a doze from which we were suddenly aroused by the shouts of our 
sailors, who came laughing and swimming on board, when the '''' shogooV 
was eased off our big sails swelled out full and round as the wind struck 
us on our port quarter, just before we got to El-Kab, the Eilcitliycs of the 
ancients, or the " City of Liicinay This was a very interesting place to 
visit, where there were some very fine rock tombs especially interesting. 
They would well repay any one for the time expended in examining them, 
but as I had visited these tombs and temples some years ago, and as the 
wind was blowing strongly in our favor and both Abdallah and Hassan 
urged us to go on, we took advantage of the wind and concluded to con- 
tinue on to Edfu. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 563 

The decorations of the tombs and temples at El-Kab were in a very 
fair state of preservation when I saw them last. In the tomb of Paheri 
we were enabled to see farm scenes such as ploughing, sowing, reaping, 
in fact all kinds of field and farm work, river scenes, such as fishing, 
hunting, etc. There is one scene here that will be of great interest to the 
Masonic student, and that is the funeral procession and th.^ Judgment of 
the Dead. One threshing scene in this tomb, where the oxen were tread- 
ing out the golden grain, has the song of the driver inscribed above, which 
is translated as follows : 

Thresh for yourselves Oxen ! 
Thresh for yourselves I 
Measure for yourselves ! 
Measure for your Masters. 

Mr. Gliddon renders it : 

Hie along oxen ! tread the corn faster ; 
The straw for yourselves, 
The corn for your master. 

Some of the scenes here will be very interesting to the Scottish Rite 
Mason. We soon left this place {El-Kab) behind us with its yellow 
mountains, date palms, etc. As the wind was blowing fresh and strong' 
we had earnestly desired to be enabled to anchor off Edfu. 

After we passed El-Kab we ran by some very fertile islands, and 
noticed that the whole of the way from Eshne, the arable land upon the 
east bank of the river was very narrow, except in a very few places, but 
before we reached Edfu it began to widen out again. Our gong sounded 
the dinner hour and we went down to partake of it, and as we sat chatting 
over our nuts and wine the loud voices of our sailors rang out in song, 
we hurried up on deck and discovered the propylon of -Edfu. We went 
gliding along, and as the shadows lengthened and twilight fell around us 
our sails were furled, and we were soon moored for the night under the 
glittering stars at Edfu, the Appollinopolis Magna of the Greeks. 

Edfu has a post and telegraph ofl&ce, and the steamers stop here 
every Tuesday and Frida}' for a couple of hours. We went on shore, and . 
strolled up to the post office, and had quite a long chat with some gentle- 
men who were remaining over, so as to be enabled to visit the celebrated 
temple at that place ; so we made arrangements to visit it together the 



564 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

next morning. We went back to the dahabiyeii, and retired early, tell- 
ing Hassan to have an early breakfast. The next morning Salame 
aroused me from a sound slumber, and finishing our morning meal, we 
started off with our new acquaintances to visit the celebrated temple, 
located about iifteen minutes ride from the river. 

The temple lies directly West of the town, and it is entirely sur- 
rounded by the mud hovels of the natives ; in fact, the whole of this most 
beautiful temple was covered, roof and all, with the mud dwellings of the 
people who lived here previous to 1864, when it was cleared of them by 
M. Mariette, who informs us as follows : 

" The excavations of Edfu are the most extensive archseological work 
ever executed under the auspices of His Highness the Khedive (Ismail 
Pasha)." A few years ago the modern village had invaded the temple, its 
ver}^ terraces being covered over with dwellings, stables, storehouses of 
every kind. In the interior the chambers were filled with rubbish almost 
to the ceiling. Tbe amount of time and trouble expended on the excava- 
tions will be realized on entering the temple, where every single line of 
inscription has now become perfectly accessible to the traveller, tourist 
and antiquarian. 

There were sixty-four houses upon the roof of this temple that 
Mariette Bey removed, and witb them the filth and vermin that went with 
these people ; and to-da}^ we are enabled to wander through, all parts of 
this beautiful and perfect specimen of an ancient Egyptian Temple, with 
all its parts perfect, as in the earl}^ days of its completion. It resembles 
the temple of Dendcrah ver}^ closel}' in its general plan ; in fact, they 
belong to the same period, and the inscriptions upon the walls of this 
temple refer continirall}^ to the same sj'stem of worship as was practiced 
in the temple of Denderah. 

The inscriptions cover all parts of this temple, for every wall, col- 
umn and ceiling is completel}' covered with hieroglyphic inscriptions that 
tell us of the use of the various halls, chambers, etc. Upon the walls of 
the Librar}' is catalogued the books that were kept in it ; in fact, every 
part of this beautiful temple tells its own stor}-. It was one of tlie best 
preserved temples, in fact, one of the finest, that is to be foutid in this 
wondrous Valley of the Nile, because it is perfect in all its parts. The 
extreme length of this building, incliiding the pylon and the circi:it wall, 



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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 565 

is fully four iiundred and fifty feet. The height of the pylon is very 
nearly one hundred and fifteen feet, and it has a frontage of one hundred 
and thirty-two feet ; but if we include the pylon, its facade is two hundred 
and fifty feet. 

On the front of this pylon are four cavities that were used for the 
purpose of securing the masts that decorated this most beautiful temple, 
into which they were no doubt fitted. There is an inscription here that 
tells us that they served for lightning conductors. Mariette believed that 
they must have been at least one hundred and fifty feet high. 

Furlong informs us in his " Rivers of Life " that Solomon's tem- 
ple was a ver}^ poor imitation of this temple at Edfu, and that it was 
upwards of fourteen times the size of the Hebrew Temple, and that one 
of the " halls " of the Edfu temple would swallow up the Jewish one 
entirely. We enjoyed ourselves very much, indeed, exploring the various 
halls and chambers of this very extraordinary temple, and after our care- 
ful examinations, we were soon on our way back to our very comfortable 
home the dahabiyeh, tired and weary, but extremely glad to know that 
we had been enabled to thoroughly examine and explore the most perfect 
temple in Egj'pt, that of Edfu. 

The next morning bright and early found our crew towing and punt- 
ing, trying to make Gebel^ or Hagar Silsilis ("the mountain of the 
chain ") as early as possible, located a distance of twenty-five miles from 
Edfu, and five hundred and forty-seven miles from Cairo ; so that we 
might be able to visit the celebrated quarries, examine the monuments, 
and hurry on to Ombos. It was however not until late that night that 
we were able to moor close to the monuments, so Hassan informed us, for 
we had retired long before reaching there, and when Salame brought us 
our coffee in the morning we found ourselves moored near the West bank. 

The river is very narrow here being not much over three hundred and 
fifty yards wide, with very lofty banks, abrupt and precipitous that come 
down to the river and inclose its very narrow quarters. We landed upon the 
east bank and visited the celebrated quarries from whence were taken 
those immense blocks of sandstone that have been used in the building 
of the great majority of temples throughout the whole of Upper Egypt. 

There are quarries on both sides of the Nile, but we visited those on 
the east side first, on account of their extraordinary size. These quarries 



566 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

are open to the light of day, and demonstrate to the present generation, 
the wondrous knowledge of the craft in quarrying and handling the stu- 
pendous stones and carrying them to the river. It is remarkable to see 
the immense amount of work that has been done here, for the whole 
mountain has been cut into with the greatest of care, and proving to us 
of to-day, that they did not use explosives, of any kind whatever, in their 
methods of quarrying. The entrance to these quarries are through a 
long cutting clear through the solid rock, and upon all sides we found 
specimens of ^^rfl;^// (or scribblings), in both Greek and Demotic char- 
acters (writing used by the ancient Egyptian people not hieroglyphical). 
There were quite a number of things quarried here that have never been 
removed from this place, where the}^ were originally carved or cut from 
the mountain side, such as Sphinxes, etc. 

There were a great many things to be seen there that will prove of 
great interest to any one who will take the time and trouble to visit this 
place. The quarries on the West bank were not nearly so large as those 
on the other side of the river, for the stones had been quarried in a differ- 
ent manner entirel}-. These quarries are open to the sky and to the 
glorious ligbt of da}^, but those on the East bank are quarried right into 
the cavernous depths of the mountain forming immense grottoes that 
were originally quarries ; but which were afterwards used for tombs, tem- 
ples, etc , while upon the walls of all are to be found hierogl3^phic inscrip- 
tions. They have also been decorated with beautiful paintings and 
sculptures from the XVIII d3mast3^ down to the Roman domination. 
Some of them are truly most magnificent specimens of ancient Egyptian 
Art. I specially refer to the bas-relief known as the " Trinviph of 
Horusr 

We had a glorious time rambling around these quarries and grottoes, 
and examining the various points of interest on both banks of this won- 
drous old river Nile, at Silsilis. We retired rather earl}- as we felt worn 
out with our investigations, and although our crew was having k grand 
old time, making the mountain ring and echo to their songs and laughter, 
we slept through it all, and awoke from our slumber the next morning 
refreshed. Salame broi:ght us our toast and coffee, when we found by the 
motion of the boat, that we were under sail, and that we were scudding 
along through the waters before a good fresh breeze, running along 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 567 

toward Ombos, at the rate of about eigbt miles an hour, and while we 
were eating our breakfast we went careening along by Fares. 

On coming on deck, after our morning meal, we sat under the awn- 
ing and smoked cigars, noticing that there was but very little arable land 
upon either bank of the river. After aAvhile we saw a decided change, for 
fertile fields began to appear upon the east bank, and we very soon passed 
a small island that was well cultivated, and as our wind held good, we 
drew up to quite a large island called Maiisuriyeh^ which divides the river 
into two branches or channels. We entered the first or largest, when our 
course became nearly due east, and just as we reached the bend of the 
river, it turned due south again and we found ourselves at Ombos, five 
hundred and sixty-four miles from Cairo. 

Kom Ombos is rapidly disappearing beneath the waters of the Nile, 
surely it is steadily falling into the river. This place, that was built to 
endure for ever, is rapidly being destroyed by the old God Nilus. Sebek, 
the deity that was worshipped here Avas also worshipped and adored at 
Silsilis, and the crocodile-headed god is found, not only upon the Stele in 
the quarries at Silsilis, but also in many parts of Ombos. As the wind 
continued to blow good and strong, we took advantage of it, and continued 
our journey southward toward Aswan. We spent a few hours at Ombos, 
but as there was not much to interest us there, we cast off our moor- 
ings, loosed our sails, and amid the sounding songs of our sailors, soon 
left it far behind us. 

There was but very little to interest one as we sailed along the river, 
and there was a sameness about it that grew monotonous to all, so I sat 
on deck under the awning, and arranged my notes, while the others 
amused themselves with various problems in chess. Our boat went spin- 
ning along over the flowing waters of the river, until we began to notice 
a most decided change in the surrounding scenery, which now had a 
peculiar charm and beauty, that must be seen to be fully appreciated, for 
we now were approaching the scene of the Poet Juvenal's banishment, by 
Domitian, on account of offending Paris, the actor. 

We were now enabled to see the mountains to the south, at whose 
feet nestles the beautiful island of Elephantine, which is about a mile in 
length and divides the river into two channels. It is a lovel}^ island, with 
ever}^ foot of arable land thoroughly cultivated, with patches of cotton, 



568 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

corn, beans, and castor-oil plants, etc. Thick palm groves gave a delight- 
ful charm and fascination to the scene, and from a distance, as the bright 
sunlight fell streaming down upon it, the island was like a beautiful 
jewel, for the play of colors upon its black syenite rocks, the golden 
sand and the vivid greens combined to enhance the beauty of this place 
beyond the power of words. It is a most interesting place to visit, and 
will repay all those who may ramble around it. Although the ruins 
were in a sadly dilapidated condition, we observed many things that 
deepl}^ interested us. We noticed that the symbols of the old pagan 
philosophies were lying side by side with the cross that dethroned them, 
and that both were superseded by Islamism. 

The Church of Christ is extinct in Nubia, and it simply drags out 
an existence in Upper Egypt in a very degraded form of worship, and all 
that remains of Christianity on the borders of Nubia are a few crosses 
indifferently cut upon the remains of some of the tombs and temples, 
demonstrating that it did at one time reach to the first cataract and Philae. 
Those teachings have long since passed away. A few columns still 
stand to mark the site of the temple of the ram-headed god Khnmn or 
Kneph^ which was destro^'cd by direction of Mohammed AH in the year 
1822, for the purpose of erecting a palace for himself at Aswan. In order 
to do this he destroyed a very beautiful temple erected by Amen-hotep of 
the eighteenth dynasty. This king was a mighty warrior, and he was 
exceedingly fond of building stupendous monuments and magnificent tem- 
ples ; the celebrated Colossi " the Vocal Memnon " bears his name. He 
was a wonderful king, who carried his conquering armies into the 
Soudan, returning with spoils to adorn his country with splendid monu- 
ments, etc. The Nileometer is well worth a visit, for now it has been put 
in proper working order, and to-day it is recording the rise and fall of the 
river as it did in the early days of its completion. 

There have been found upon this island of Elephantine a great 
many things that have interested the scientific world, and among them 
portions of a calendar of the time of Thothmes III, that records the rising 
of A}iubis^ or the " dog star," nearly thirty-four centuries ago. There 
are two villages on the island, the inhabitants of which seem to be 
Nubians, and on the arrival of travellers upon this island they will crowd 
around you, and offer all kinds of antiquities for sale, sometimes small 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 569 

coins, and fragments of pottery, shells, etc. There is no doubt but that a 
great many of these so-called antiquities are manufactured like those at 
Thebes. At the southern end of the island one may frequently find 
fragments of inscribed terra-cotta vases, many of which are valuable. On 
the east bank, and opposite this island, is located the frontier town of 
Bgypt Aswan, or as it is called by man}^ writers ^''Assouan,'''' or " Syene^'' 
distant five hundred and ninety miles from Cairo, in Latitude 24°, 5', 23" 
North, and 32°, 55' East Longitude, which figures prove, that to-day, this 
town is not under the tropic of Cancer. 

It was on account of a report spread throughout the " Land of 
Bgypt " of a well in Aswan, wherein there was no shadow even at mid- 
day, which led the celebrated philosopher and mathematician Eratos- 
thenes, who had charge of the Alexandrian Library, to measure the 
obliquity of the ecliptic, and also to measure a degree of the meridian. 
He discovered the exact circumference of the Earth, using the same 
methods in that day, that have been adopted by our own geometricians to- 
day. At the present time there is no well at Aswan in which the sun is 
reflected at noon, when it reaches its meridian height and glory, but, in 
the fourth century b. c. Aswan was most certainly under the tropic of 
cancer, and there is no doubt, but that there was a shadowless well at 
this place at that time. 

We now found ourselves among a different class of people entirely, 
from those we had been accustomed to in our long journey up the Nile. 
The various articles they had for sale were also different. The town of 
Aswan is a very busy one, on account of its being the principal market 
town for the whole of the Soudan and Abyssinia. The streets of this 
place are very much like those of every other mud village throughout 
the whole of the " Land of Egypt," and the bazaars are just about the 
same, containing nearly all things usually found in the various 
towns in the valley of the Nile. A great deal more can be purchased 
here in Aswan, because a great many things are brought here, from the 
upper country, that are not always to be found in the bazaars of the 
towns below. There are quite a large number of cafes here, and each and 
every one have their regular dancing girls, who make night hideous 
with their mad revels. 

It is extremely interesting to pass in among the tents of the mer- 



570 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

chants (who camp here) and to examine the various goods they have for 
sale. We were shown elephants tusks, henna leaves, lion, leopard, and 
in fact all kinds of skins ; gum arable, tamarinds and war implements of 
all kinds, etc. There is one thing most certain and that is you will find 
ostrich feathers much cheaper here than in any other place in Egypt. I 
paid fifty cents each for some beautiful black and grey ones, that you 
could not buy here in America for less than five or six dollars. The 
largest and most perfect white feathers can be bought for four or five 
dollars that would very much astonish some of your wives and daughters. 

There are a great many things one ought to buy here besides ostrich 
feathers, well worth taking back with you, as " souvenirs." These com- 
prise ivory rings, silver rings, armlets, beautiful basket work, and the 
aprons of leather fringe which form the costume of the Nubian women, 
and which are called " Madame Nubia." The people we met here were 
entirely different from those of Egypt. The turban was seldom seen ex- 
cepting upon the heads of Egyptians or old men of Nubia. The great 
majority went around bare-headed and wore nothing to cover their heads, 
other than their thick matted hair, which was plentifully bedaubed with 
castor oil; as well as the whole of their bodies. The young men 
generally wore a small cloth around their loins of very scant dimen- 
sions, and the young women {virgins) simply wore " Madame Nubia." 
The older women wore a long blue robe, and the old men a long loose 
white one (?) and very often a turban. The women of Nubia do not 
cover their faces at all times with a veil, they seem to be more free to 
do as they please than the women of Egypt, and they are most assuredly 
far more virtuous. It was very peculiar to see both the young men 
and women shining like billiard balls, with their bodies glistening in 
the sun, smeared all over with castor oil, which was the prevailing fashion 
among the " elite " of Nubia. 

There is just as much difference between Egypt and Nubia, as there 
is between the people of the two countries. The palm grows just as 
abundantly above Aswan as it does below, and the dates of Nubia are 
noted for their delicious flavor. In fact, they have been sought for, 
above all others, throughout all the eastern countries. The face of the 
whole country changed entirely beyond the island of Philas, and the 
scenery became more wild and fantastic ; the river was far narrowtr, and 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 571 

consequently more rapid. The arable land was mucli less, but the vege- 
tation seemed to put on a brighter garb than that which we had been 
accustomed to in our long journe}^ from Cairo to Philse. 

A great many men we met carried a spear and shield, the latter 
made from the tough hide of the hippopotamus. It has a large boss in 
the centre, with an iron bar across it, so that the hand can grasp it firmly 
when it is needed for defensive purposes. The language that we heard 
spoken was also very different from what we had been accustomed to, and 
is what the Hgj'ptians call Barabra^ and the people who speak it Berberi^ 
which was no doubt the word or name from which we derive the word 
Barbarian. The ancient Egyptians considered all people who did not 
live in Egypt and speak their language to be Barbarians. 

One of the most interesting places to visit in this vicinity is the 
celebrated granite quarries, located just beyond the Arab cemetery. 
Here we may see and examine the work of men who lived and wrought 
in these celebrated quarries long centuries before the foundation of Rome 
was laid. These specimens of their skill and workmanship are lying 
there to-day just as the workmen left them ages ago. It does not seem 
possible that those chips of granite which fell from the stroke of a gavel, 
were broken off long centuries before Rome w-as founded, or Romulus 
and Remus suckled. They look to-day as clean and bright as the}' did 
when they first fell before the hand of the craftsmen long centuries ago. 
As we stood looking down upon the handiwork of the men of the dim 
and misty past, we could hardly realize the bewildering stretch of time 
that had passed away since those ancient craftsmen laughed, chatted and 
worked in these quarries, and cut from the hard granite such tremendo:is 
blocks of stone apparently as easily as we of to-day would cut so much 
clay or chalk. This demonstrates to us of this present century, their 
thorough knowledge of quarrying immense blocks of stone without waste 
or injury to the quarry itself; and right here we have ocular demonstra- 
tions of their wondrous knowledge of mechanical arts, and their ability to 
transport such stupendous blocks of stone, to build or adorn their temples 
in the hoary ages of the past. 

As I have previously stated, in Chapter III of this work, it is the 
height of absurdity to credit Archimedes with the invention of the lever 
or wedge, for here we see the practical application of the one, and the 



572 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

work in this place alone indicates tlie knowledge of tlie other. Here in 
these quarries we were enabled to see for ourselves, not only their 
methods of quarrying, but their manner of using the wedge for that 
purpose. The immense obelisk we saw here in the rough, which is 
nearly a hundred feet long, and fully eleven feet square at the larger end, 
testifies to this fact. We could see the holes that had been drilled along 
its entire length, for the express purpose of inserting wooden wedges, in 
order to detach it from the quarr}^ 

There are many things to be found here that they have quarried, 
such as rough columns and various other peculiar shaped stones, 
intended, no doubt, for some especial purpose, that puzzled us immensely. 
No one who conies to this place should fail to visit these quarries, for 
they will most assuredly prove of great interest. I must certainly say 
that we enjoyed ourselves ver}^ much indeed, rambling around not only 
the quarries, but the town itself, watching the dahabiyehs making the 
ascent of the rapids, and purchasing the various articles to take back 
home to our friends as " souvenirs " from the borders of Nubia. As we 
did not take our dahabiyeh any farther than Aswan, we retained our 
Pilot, and as the crew remained with us, we made no change at all. If 
we had taken our boat up the cataract for a journey farther South, we 
should have been compelled to hire another Pilot, at least to direct our 
course, in the place of the one who had performed his duty so well in 
piloting our boat in safety from Cairo to the borders of Nubia, and the 
first cataract of the Nile. 

The next morning we hired camels for the purpose of riding over to 
Mahatta, the first port in Nubia, after leaving Aswan. At this point 
goods or merchandise is unloaded for re-embarkation at Aswan, being 
destined for the different points below the cataract. Hassan had picked 
out all the camels necessary for our party, so bright and early we rode off 
with the worst lot of snarling, growling brutes that I had ever seen. 

The great majority of my readers no doubt, understand how to 
mount a camel, but if they have never ridden one, it would be impossible 
for me to make them comprehend the sensation of the motion of one of 
these horrible brutes, the sumpter-camels. If the camel should walk with 
an even gait, you will be jostled backwards and forward, and you will 
wish that these animals had never existed, and will sigh for the donkey 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 573 

of Egypt. If he walks ahead briskly, with long swinging strides, you 
will be afraid that every joint in your body will be dislocated, if he does 
not stop. When he trots no words can express the horrible torture you are 
enduring, and if he should run, — well, only those who have trod the hot 
sands of the desert can fully explain the feeling of having "/o Iio/d c«." 

When you are seated in the saddle, if you should happen to move, 
the miserable brute will tr}- to bite your feet or legs, and should 3'ou try 
to compel him to go a different way from his own chosen route, he will 
turn his head and looking you snarlingly in the face swear at you in 
both Arabic and Berberi. If that does not compel you to leave him 
alone, wh}- — he will lie right down and try to get you off. 

A sumpter-camel is the most horrible thing in the world to try 
to ride. They are only fit for carrying heavy burdens across a trackless 
desert, under a burning tropical sun, and can be made to carry six or 
seven hundred pounds of pack goods all day long without stopping to 
drink. Mahatta is quite a small village that is used expressly for the 
purpose of shipping cargoes from the boats overland to Aswan, or receiv- 
ing them for loading into the boats going into the Soudan or Abyssinia 
as the case may be, but since the British domination of this country the 
town of Shellal has taken its place. One can hire boats at either place 
for a voyage up to the second cataract and back, but they are very dirty 
with scarcely anything at all in the shape of furniture on board. They 
do not begin to compare with the clean, brightly painted, well fitted daha- 
biyehs of Egypt, but as we were not going up this time, we did not bother 
ourselves about transportation beyond the first cataract or Aswan. 

We hired a Filucca to take us over to the " Holy Island " of Philas, 
one of the most lovely spots in the whole of Egypt. There is no one who 
comes to this place who can help recognizing the grandeur and beauty of 
this most extraordinary Island and its picturesque surroundings, which 
are extremely grand, and which will charm and fascinate all who see it. 
On our trip from Mahatta to this lovely island, I was charmed and 
delighted in viewing this most exquisite piece of scenery. The tufted 
palms and pylons rise in their wondrous beauty seemingly from out the 
waters of the Nile, and the various columns and walls of the temple look 
as if the}^ were new and in the height of their glory, just completed and 
ready for occupation. As we drew nearer to the Island everything looked 



574 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

beautiful, stately, magnificent, and as we gazed upon it from our boat upon 
tlie river, we saw tbat charming roofless temple called " Pharaoh's Bed." 
We were lost in thoughts of the glorious dajs of long ago, until the 
grating of the boat against the stones of an ancient landing place, aroused 
us from our reverie, when we sprang upon the gunwale of our boat, 
and climbed the steep bank, and stood enraptured before the glorious ruins 
of a magnificent temple, realizing that we were now viewing the crowning 
glory of our voyage. 

The remains of the tombs and temples here are not vast, but they are 
extremely beautiful, and the impressions of the various ruins will forever 
remain with me so long as life shall last. Chief among these remains stands 
" Pharaoh's Bed," the beauties of which can never be fully described, any 
more than can the island itself. It has been sketched, painted and photo- 
graphed from all points, but that alone cannot demonstrate its wondrous 
charm and beauty. What is a magnificent jewel without a setting? Of 
course we recognize its splendor, but the setting most assuredly enhances 
the beauty of the gem itself, and shows it off to the best advantage. In 
the same way, to get the full effect of this most lovely scene, we should 
approach the Island at certain times in a filucca upon the river, with the 
distant mountain as a back-ground, and the immense rocks framing it in, 
forming a most beautiful setting. It is iinder these conditions, with the 
mountain and rocks lit up with a play of colors indescribabl}^ grand, the 
tufted palms, glistening colonnades and pylons glowing in the changing 
light, like the scintillations of a most magnificent jewel, that we fail to 
find words wherein to express the beauty of the scene. You w^ould fail, as 
I have to convey to you, my dear brothers and readers, the indescribable 
charm and beauty of the " Holy Island " of Philae and its surroundings, 

"The footprints of an elder race are here, 
And memories of an heroic time, 
And shadows of the old mysterious faith ; 
So that the isle seems haunted and strange sounds 
Float on the wind through all its ruined depths. 

" ' By him who sleeps in Philse ' — such the oath 
Which bound th' Egyptian's soul as with a chain 
Imperishable, Ay, by Aniun Ra, 
The great Osiris^ — who lies slumbering here, 
Lulled by the music of the flowing Nile. 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 575 

Ages have gone, and creeds, and dynasties, 
And a new order reigns o'er all the Earth ; 
Yet still the mighty Presence keeps the isle — 
Awful, serene, and grandly tranquil he, 
With Isis watching — restless in her love ! " 

This island was considered to be the most sacred spot in all the 
world to the ancient Egyptian. It is not very large, only about four 
hundred yards long, by about one hundred and fifty yards wide at its 
broadest part. To-day it is not inhabited, but there is a man who guards 
it, and who makes his home on an adjacent island. The most ancient 
building on this island of Philse, was erected by Nectanebu II between 
the years b. c 381 and 365, and all that remains of it to-day are a few 
columns, etc. 

There are a great many things that will deeply interest the tourist 
on this lovely island, and all those who are desirous of examining the 
ruined temples of the various Ptolemies and Caesars should camp upon 
it, and go over it very carefully so as to see all the varied beauties upon 
it, for it is " strewn with ruins." One of the most beautiful and pictur- 
esque of all of them is the ICiosque, commonly called " Pharaoh's Bed ;" 
which is located on the east side of the island, and is said to have been 
dedicated to Isis, or the Triad that was sacred to Philse, which was — 
Osiris, Isis, and Horns. This temple is roofless, and was never com- 
pleted, but for all that it is a most charming spot and a most delightful 
place to enjoy an hour, and refresh yourself with luncheon, etc. 

The cataract islands in the vicinity are well worth a visit, but more 
especially to the geologist and others who are desirous of seeing the 
many inscriptions, carved upon the rocks, many of which date back to the 
XI and XII dynasties. We had now completed a tour throughout the 
■whole length and breadth of this most extraordinary country visiting and 
describing nearly all the ancient cities, and exploring the principal tombs 
and temples throughout both Upper and Lower Egypt, and we must cer- 
tainly sa}' that we had derived an immense amount of pleasure in 
doing so. 

After our trip to Philae we return to Aswan, and to our dahabiyeh, 
tired and weary. During our absence our crew had baked their bread 
for the return voyage, and they now engaged in cleaning our boat from 



576 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

truck to kelson. We were going to remain here a few days as a caravan 
was expected to come in from the interior, and awaiting its arrival we 
remained within the roar of the foamy waters at Aswan. 

The caravan arrived from the South with its strange looking Nubian 
attendants. It was a sight that will remain with us through all time, 
and whenever the name of Aswan or Camel is mentioned that strange, 
peculiar, barbaric procession conies back to me in all it^ peculiar features. 
There were somewhere about one hundred and twenty-five camels in line, 
and by the side of many of them walked barefooted a tall sturdy looking 
Nubian, whose shining bronze skin gave him the appearance of a living 
moving statue. 

What strange looking bundles and packages the camels carry upon 
their backs, many of which are covered with raw hides containing 
elephants' tusks about ten or twelve feet long, some were carrying 
immense bundles of gum-arabic, wrapped up in skins and tied with long 
strips of hippopotamus hide. Others carried packages of the skins of 
all kinds of wild animals, and upon the backs of some of the camels 
were crates of wild beasts, one of which contained a litter of 3'oung lions 
that were 'quite playful. When the strange cortege halted to camp 
beside the river they formed quite a village of their own. 

The leader of the caravan was a most magnificent specimen of a 
man, standing fully six feet and five inches tall ; he was armed with 
regular old fashioned pistols and sword. We saw many who were armed 
with spear and shield, and occasionally they had an old fashioned brass 
mounted pistol stuck in their girdle, and many of them were armed with 
a club and sheath knife strapped around their arms. We mingled freely 
with the jostling crowd and found among them natives from nearly all 
parts of Africa and Abj-ssinia. 

After they had camped and unloaded their camels, we went in among 
them and bought some beautiful leopard skins, ostrich feathers, spears 
shields, ornaments and some very fine specimens of basket work, that 
had been manufactured by people who lived beyond Khartoum. These 
things Hassan and Salame took down to the dahabiyeh while we 
'■' dickered " for a lot of very fine curiosities from the Soudan. 

The next morning we started on our return trip to Cairo, rowing 
through the day and drifting through the night. Sometimes we had a 



EGYPT THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 517 

good breeze in our favor of whicli our captain and pilot took advantage, 
diiring sucli times our sailors would sing, dance and play their drums 
and pipes to their heart's content, for they were now " homeward bound.'' 

Egypt is without doubt the most extraordinary, interesting and 
attractive country that the Masonic student should visit, in order to 
improve himself in the signs, symbols and allegories pertaining to 
Masonry. There he will have ocular demonstrations of the knowledge 
that was thoroughly comprehended by those ancient craftsmen, who lived 
upon the banks of the Nile, long centuries before the dawn of authenti- 
cated history. The ordinary traveler who desires to examine the ancient 
cities, tombs, temples, monuments and mummies of a pre-historic age, 
will find that there is no country on earth that will prove of greater 
interest to him than Egypt, and the Valley of the Nile. 

Time has not robbed it of its peculiar charms and fascinations, but 
has rather given to it an atmosphere of tnystery, that must be solved by 
actual searching among the ruins of this most wonderful countr}^ If 
the student investigates and studies along the Valley of the Nile, he will 
discover many things that will prove the great antiquity of Egypt, and 
the wonderful knowledge that pertained to those people who built such 
stupendous fabrics in order to adorn and beautify the banks of this grand 
old river Nile. The Masonic student, if he be careful in his investiga- 
tions, will have proof positive of the actual existence of the teachings of 
our own glorious Rite, in the fact that the people who migrated here laid 
the first stone of foundation, to establish themselves and their philoso- 
phies permanently upon the banks of one of the grandest, and most 
peculiar rivers in the world. 

Greece and Rome were but the offshoots of this most wonderful civ- 
ilization which originated in the Valley of Hindostan qr the " Land of 
the Vedas," and which was Cradled on the banks of the Nile in the dim 
dawn of prehistoric ages. Egypt was a wonderful country with a know- 
ledge of Social forms. Law and Order, long centuries before Abraham 
crossed the plains of Mamre in the company of angels, and the Hebrew 
people are modern when compared with the Ancient Egyptians. There 
is no question to the thinking man and Masonic student, but that Egypt, 
was not only the Cradle of Ancient Masonry, but the Cradle of the 
World's ancient civilization. 



578 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

Cecrops carried with him to Greece, when he founded Cecropia, the 
wondrous knowledge that afterwards ramified through it, and which came 
down to the other peoples beautified, and enwrapped in the exquisite 
thought that gave to the world the Greek School of Philosophy and her 
marble miracles, and which also gave to Rome her boasted civilization. 
The effect of this has passed down through the drifting ages, throughout 
the whole of Europe, until we find it in this Twentieth Century domi- 
nating our own beloved America, with its wondrous teachings, proving 
the truth of the scriptures that " TJiere is no new thing under the su7i^'' 
Eccl. 1-9. For instance. — 

In our extradition treaties with other peoples we are now doing what 
was known and done in the " Golden Age of Egypt," for upon one of the 
walls, in the great temple of Karnak, we can find to-day written in hiero- 
glyphic inscription an extradition treaty that was made between Rameses 
and Khetasira, Prince of Kheta (Hittites). This most valuable record 
can be seen upon a wall that juts out at right angles from the South wall 
of the temple, about sixty feet from the entrance to the temple, on that 
side of it. There is no doubt in my mind that this wall was built for the 
express purpose of recording this very valuable record or treaty. It was 
placed under the especial protection of the gods that were w^orshipped by 
the peoples of both countries : " Sutekh of Kheta, Amen of Egypt and 
all the thousand gods, male and female ; the gods of the hills, of the rivers, 
of the great sea, of the winds and the clouds, of the Land of Kheta and 
of the Land of Egypt." 

A great many people consider it to be a modern invention to hatch 
out chickens by the use of the incubator ; why, the ancient Egyptians 
hatched them out with natural heat, by simply burying the eggs in the 
sand and covering them up with manure. The modern Egyptians hatch 
them in ovens with a heat that is regulated for that purpose, and during 
the process of hatching they were carefully watched so as to keep the 
temperature even. 

The modern nickle-in-the-slot machine is not new, for the ancient 
Egyptians used a simple machine for the purpose of supplying water for 
their lustrations, by baptism or washing, before entering their temples. 
The machine was worked by placing a small coin in a slit or slot, when it 
would drop down upon a perfectly balanced lever that would set in motion 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 579 

another sweep or lever, which would open a valve through which enough 
water would flow for their own especial use. 

There is no question but that the knowledge that pertained to those 
ancient peoples was most profound and complete. All the scientific 
knowledge of the present day was thoroughly comprehended by the 
ancients, but there have been many things lost to the world, lost through 
fire, flood and the bigotry and fanatacism of many peoples, who destroyed 
what they could not, or would not, understand, and retarded the progress 
of the world in so doing. 

Every religion that has ever been known is a fragment, from the 
Ancient Wisdom Religion^ and like the most prominent to-day, they never 
can, nor never will, satisfy the demands of the devotees, because there is 
not one of them that is complete in itself, and consequently cannot, and 
does not, as a fragmentary portion, stand alone like the Ancient Wisdom 
Religion. This wondrous Secret Doctrine^ this Ancient IVisdom, 
originally came from India and it followed in the footsteps of those 
peoples, who wandered from that country into Egypt and Chaldea, and 
was afterwards taught throughout Greece and Rome. It appears to-day, 
across the threshold of the twentieth century, as the one great force that 
will lead us on to Love and Righteousness. 

Egypt is a wonderful country to-day ; it has ever been a problem to 
the learned men of nearly every age, and we ourselves have stood with 
bowed head, in awe and admiration, before the stupendous ruins of these 
most extraordinary people. I have realized that those gigantic stones, 
quarried by the craftsmen of prehistoric ages, were like the great 
Sphinx — voiceless ! but each and every one contains a history of its own, 
and represents a portion of the tattered pages of the historical records of 
this wonderful country and people. 

There is a change coming over the various teachings of to-day, for 
the hand of inquiry and investigation is upon the throat of the various 
ISMS, and will not be downed, or satisfied with mysteries or parables, but 
will require the Truth — the whole Tnith^ for "There is no Religion 
HIGHER THAN Truth.'' The latter part of the nineteenth century 
witnessed a great revival of knowledge and scientific investigation that 
has excited widespread and profound attention, evidenced by the literature 
that has come to us across the threshold of the twentieth centur}-, 



580 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

bringing witli it tbie Light, Kiioivledge and Tr2ith of bygone ages. Once 
more the Secret Doctrine comes forth, from the obscurity, into which it 
was thrown by the superstitious ignorance, fanatacism and bigotry of 
Mohammedism and the Romish Church, and the influence of ecclesiastical 
religion. As I have before stated, the element of supernaturalism is fast 
disappearing under the influence of modern scientific generalizations, and 
an}^ doctrine, or teaching, which presents itself for acceptance among the 
readers and thinkers of to-day, must undergo the first test, as to whether 
it can stand in line with the law of the conservation of energy, and the 
ordered sequence of cause and effect, which we discover in every domain 
of natural phenomena. 

Now, not only is this fundamental claim of the various tenets of the 
Secret Doctrine itself, so far as it has been presented to the world up to 
the present time, but it can be proved fully and undisputably that a trans- 
cendental knowledge of man's nature has always existed in the world — 
so far, at all events, as we have any historical records. All the great 
Religions and Philosophies are but echoes or reflections of these occult 
doctrines, overlaid and perverted in most instances, by ages of superstition 
and ignorance. The revival of this knowledge will clear away entirely 
that element of super-naturalism in religion, which is the great cause of 
the total rejection of all religious doctrines by the intelligent thinkers of 
the present da3^ But it will do more than this. In freeing Religion from 
its supernatural element, its work will be constructive of a new and surer 
basis, for the practice of religion as a matter of conduct instead of belief. 



jjctoisf) Cratritions antr Customs-€al)It €otD 
Ceremonies oi indent initiation— 
moh oi tfje ILato, 



581 



Before tbv mind thou to this study bend. 
Invoke the gods to grant it a good end. 
these if thy labor vanquish, thou shalt then 
Know the connection both of gods and men; 
Row everything proceeds, or by what stayed ; 
Hnd know us far as fit to be surveyed^ 
ISature alike throughout; that thou mayest learn 
Not to hope hopeless things, but all discern. 

— Pythagoras. 



582 



EGYPT, TEE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 583 



CHAPTER XXV. 

JEWISH TRADITIONS AND CUSTOMS— CABLE TOW— CEREMONIES OF 
ANCIENT INITIATION— BOOK OF THE LAW. 

"TpTNEFERENCE was made to Traditions in a previous cliapter of this 
I ^y work ; but now I want you to thoroughly understand, that if it 

^"^ were not for traditions, we should not know the day of the 
week, the month, or the year that we are living in to-day. Therefore, in 
dealing with records that antedate authenticated history, as well as those 
symbols and allegories that belong to the Symbolic degrees of Free 
Masonry, we are compelled to depend upon Traditions for the elucidation 
and proper understanding of them. 

Tradition signifies the transmission of knowledge, opinions, man- 
ners, customs, etc., by oral communications from one generation to 
another. Now, in order that you may better understand me, let me 
inform you that amidst the writings of the ancient Hebrews we find that 
" the words of the Scribes are lovely, above the words of the Law ; that 
the words of the Law are all weighty ; that the words of the Elders are 
weightier than the words of the Prophets." By which is meant that the 
Traditions delivered to them by the Scribes and Elders in the Mishna 
and Talmud are to be considered of more value than the Holy 
Scriptures. 

Without the aid of Traditions, said the Rabbins, our knowledge 
would be very limited. We glean from this same source that Hillel, a 
celebrated Jewish Rabbin ; in fact, one of their greatest' Sages, was taunt- 
ingly asked by a Cairoite : " Master, how can you prove that Tradition is 
true, and what evidence does it rest upon ?" The Rabbin, pausing for a 
moment, crossing his arms over his breast and casting his eyes upwards 
in deep thought, then looking the man square in the face, said unto him : 
" Let me hear you repeat the first three letters of your alphabet." The 
man pronounced the letters " A B C," when the Sage said unto him : 
" How did you learn to pronounce those letters in that way, and no 



584 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

other?" The man replied: "I so learned them from my Father." 
" And in this way your son shall learn them from you," rejoined Hillel, 
" and this is Tradition." 

And thus it was long ages before writing was known, the ancients 
handed down from Father to Son a knowledge of their manners, customs. 
Arts, Sciences and Philosophies, which have been the admiration of all 
men of every age of the world's history. The Wisdom that belonged to 
these ancient peoples, as well as their manners and customs, has stepped 
across the threshold of the twentieth century for our own especial edifica- 
tion. If we care to see o?ie of the ancient customs of the Hebrew people, 
that has been handed down from generation to generation, let us go to 
one of their Abattoirs or slaughtering houses, where we may be enabled 
to see the Chocat kill a beef, in the same manner as it was done in the 
days of Abraham. They are just as particular now in performing the 
operation as they were then. 

In order to kill a beef the Chocat uses a very long and sharp knife 
called a Chalef, of which he takes great care. It is honed or sharpened 
to a razor-like edge, and kept scrupulously clean ; and when the Chocat 
desires to kill- an animal for food, he cuts the throat with one contint:ous 
cut, being very careful not to touch the bone, for if he does, it is Trifa^ 
or impure ; but the veins and arteries must be severed b}^ one continuous 
cut from ear to ear. After which, the heart and lungs are thoroughly 
examined, to see if the animal was healthy and fit for food. Then if any 
of the parts were found in an unhealthy condition, the body was marked 
Trifa^ when it was divided in the centre and thrown away ; but if every- 
thing was found to be healthy and pure, it was marked Kosha, or pure, 
and good and fit for food. 

The Jewish people, at the time of their forced stay in Persia, were 
perfectly familiar with the doctrines of both Persia and India, and mau}^ 
of them held some of the highest offices under the Persian Bmpire. No 
matter where they lived, they soon attained to some of the most promi- 
nent positions in those various countries, such as governors, judges, etc. 
When Cyrus gave them their freedom, with permission to return to 
Jerusalem in order to rebuild their temple, all of them were not desirous 
of going, for there were a great number who were perfectly willing to 
remain in Persia, where their children had been born, who spoke the 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 585 

same language and, in fact, were like the people with whom they lived, 
having the same freedom. Thej^ may have been considered to be in 
bondage, but it is self-evident that they had equal rights among the 
Persians, with whom they lived, just as they are with us to-day. 

Daniel was the Chief of the Babylonian College of Magi, and Min- 
ister and companion to the King. Mordecai became Prime Minister and 
Esther, his cousin, a Jewish damsel, became Queen, and helped her 
people. Look at Joseph, who was sold into bondage, and see to what 
prominence he attained ! Disraeli, in our own time, became Prime Min- 
ister of England under Victoria. I tell you, my dear Brothers and 
Friends, that we owe a great deal to the Hebrew people. Moses gave to 
us the Decalogue, the very foundation of our Laws and civilization. The 
Word was made manifest in the body and blood of Christ, a Jew. In fact, 
we depend upon Jewish biographies for an account of his life and work. 

Aristobulus and Philo Judseus were both Jews, and at the head of the 
Jewish Greek school of philosophy in Alexandria, where the)' labored 
earnestly and incessantly to prove that the Jewish Scriptures were simply 
allegories, that contained within themselves the most profound Truths 
and philosophies of every other country and peoples, and that Plato 
received some of his grandest thoughts from this source. Aristobulus 
himself positively asserted that the ethics of Aristotle demonstrated the 
esoteric teachings of the law of Moses, and Philo tried his utmost to 
reconcile the writings of Moses with the Pythagorean school of Philoso- 
phy. Josephus, the Jewish historian, has demonstrated in his works that 
the Essenes were identical with the Egyptian Theraputse. Ammonius, a 
Christian philosopher, organized a Platonic school of Philosophy at Alex- 
andria in A. D. 232. He strived in vain to reconcile the various religious 
sects, by having them give up their strife and bickerings, telling them 
that they were all possessed of the same glorious Truths, and that the 
first thing for them to believe in was, or should be, the Universal Brother- 
hood of Man, in fact he tried to verify the teachings of Aristobulus and 
Philo Judseus. 

Albert Pike in " Morals and Dogmas," page 744, states that " All 
truly dogmatic religions have issued from the Kabalah and return to it ; 
everything scientific and grand in the religious dreams of all the illu- 
minati, Jacob Bcehme, Swendenborg, Saint Martin and others, is borrowed 



586 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

from the Kabalali ; all the Alasonic associations owe to it their Secrets and 
their Symbols. The Kabalah alone consecrates the alliance of the Uni- 
versal Reason and the Divine Word ; it establishes, by the counterpoises 
of two forces apparently opposite, the eternal balance of being ; it alone 
reconciles Reason with Faith, Power with Liberty, Science with Mystery ; 
it has the keys of the Present, the Past and the Future. 

" The Bible with all the allegories it contains, expresses in an incom- 
plete and veiled iranner only, the religious science of the Hebrews. The 
doctrine of Moses and the Prophets, identical at bottom with that of the 
ancient Egyptians, also had its outward meaning and its veils. The 
Hebrew books were written only to recall to memory the traditions ; and 
they were written in Symbols unintelligible to the Profane. The Penta- 
teuch and the prophetic poems were merely elementary books of doc- 
trines, morals or liturgy ; and the true secret and traditional philosophy 
was only written afterward, under veils still less transparent. Thus was 
a second Bible born, unknown to, or rather uncomprehended b}', the Chris- 
tians ; a collection, they say, of monstrous absurdities ; a monument, the 
adept says, wherein is everything that the genius of philosophy and that 
of religion have ever formed or imagined of the sublime ; a treasure 
surrounded by thorns ; a diamond concealed in a rough dark stone. 

" One is filled with admiration on penetrating into the Sanctuar}^ of 
the Kabalah, at seeing a doctrine so logical, so simple, and at the same time 
so absolute. The necessary union of ideas and signs, the consecration of 
the most fundamental realities by the primitive characters ; the Trinity of 
Words, Letters and Numbers ; a philosophy simple as the alphabet, pro- 
found and Infinite as the Word ; theorems more complete and luminous 
than those of Pythagoras ; a theology summed up by counting on one's 
fingers ; an Infinite which can be held in the hollow of an infant's hand ; 
ten ciphers and twenty-two letters, a triangle, a square and a circle — 
these are all the elements of the Kabalah. These are the elementary 
principles of the written Word, reflection of that spoken Word that 
created the World." 

From the preceding, m}' dear Brothers, you will see that the Hebrew 
peoples have been the medium through which we have received many very 
valuable Traditions, Symbols and Allegories, that are to be traced through 
the Symbolic into the Chapter and Council degrees of the York Rite. By 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 587 

careful examination we shall find that they are very much mixed up. But 
at the same time we shall find them all there, and the earnest student 
will find a rich field for investigation among the ruins of the Temple, 
where he will be enabled to discover valuable knowledge and information 
respecting the Symbology, Allegories and Traditions of the Fraternity. 
It will require a great deal of patience and perseverance before he will be 
enabled to unravel, not only the tangled skein of the symbolic degrees, 
but that of the Royal Arch and Council also. 

One of the very first things he will discover will be that the 
secrets which lie concealed in our symbols and allegories are not taught 
openly in the Lodges, Chapters and Councils. They are known most 
certainly, but thej^ are not given out promiscuously to every Brother. 
He is left to find the esoteric meaning of them, by and for himself alone. 
In his Entering, Passing and Raising in the Symbolic degrees he will 
realize that there are many things that will demand his time and most 
profound attention before he will find even a rudimentary explanation. 
But at length, when the first ray of " Light " permeates his mind, he will 
begin to realize that he is turning the tattered Archaic pages of a most 
profound and sublime philosophy. He will also discover that the key to 
the " Lost Word " is in his own hand. Again, when he and his com- 
panions wander among the fragmentary evidences of the Wisdom that 
belonged to the hoary civilization of a long, long past, he will not only 
see the " Light " but he will hear the faint echo of the " Lost Word " 
reverberating under the Living Arch. The " Light " will not illuminate 
his mind until he is ready to receive it, and the guttural vibrations of the 
Word itself will only be a paradox to him. When he passes into the 
higher degrees of our glorious Scottish Rite, thoroughl}^ comprehending 
what he has already learned, through the Light he carries within his 
own heart, to illuminate his mind, every sound and word he has heard 
in the preceding degrees will be a priceless jewel to help him on to 
higher planes, and the unveiling of more profound and grander Truths 
that are embodied in our most Illustrious Fraternity, the Ancient and 
Accepted Scottish Rite. 

A great many of the craft claim that the first three, or Blue I/odge 
degrees, contain the whole of Masonr}'. Well — so it does to him who 
knows. — But how many are there who do know ? The whole of the sub- 



588 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

lime philosophical teachings of IMasonry are latent in the S3'mbolic 
degrees, bvit it can never be thoroughly comprehended, nntil the 
Aspirant has taken the inefifable and profound philosophical degrees of 
our Scottish Rite. 

Now ui}^ dear Brothers and friends, in order that 3'ou ma}^ f^^Hy 
understand me let me say, that the first three rules in arithmetic contain, 
in potentia, the whole of the science of numbers. We could not calculate 
anj-thing without a knowledge of addition, subtraction and multiplica- 
tion. Having just these three rules alone, what could we know of pro- 
portion, square root, mensiiration, trigonometr3^ etc., until we thoroughly 
understood the combinations and collocjltions that elucidate the higher 

o 

branches of mathematics ? In the same manner, we may sa^' that in 
music the octave contains, in potentia, all harmony ; so it does, to those 
who know how to combine the various notes so as to produce the di\ine 
harmony of the masters, such as Mozart, Rossini, Mej'erbeer, Mendels- 
slion and others. 

I tell 3^ou, my dear friends, that the first three degrees of Masonrj^ 
form the foundation iipon which have been erected the " Higher degrees," 
these ineffa'ble and sublimely beautiful philosophical degrees which have 
come down to us from the Indian, Mazdean and ancient Egyptian 
Mysteries. 

Gil. W. Barnard says in the IMa}^ number of " The Canadian Free- 
mason," pages 336 cf srq. : " Frequently we hear the remark that all of 

Freemasour}' is contained in the first three degrees I cannot be 

justlj' charged with partiality when I claim that all that belongs to 
Freemasonr)' is not contained in the Lodge degrees. The ]\Iark and 
Ro3-al Arch degrees of the chapter, as well as those of Ro3-al and Select 
Master, are not onl3^ essentialh' IMasonic in character, but are as much 
needed for a proper understanding of our legends and nn-steries as an3' 
part of the first three degrees. Some may sa3', (and truthfully-) that the 
Masonic portions of the degrees mentioned were taken from the second 
and third degrees, but that outy goes to prove my position. Another 
feature, and to me it is a much stronger argument for the usefulness of 
the so-called higher degrees, is that in the work of them we find an elabo- 
ration, and illustration in detail of the best and strongest points con- 
tained in the Lodge work Nothing is more Masonic than the 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 589 

teaching regarding the work and wages of the Mark Master, and equally 
so is the lesson contained in the Royal Arch, and the Grand Omnific 
Royal Arch Word. Holiness to the Lord is the essence of Freemasonry. 

Brethren, it is true beyond a question in my experience that 

the lodsfe is strensfthened, and made more useful through the lessons 
received b}^ their members in chapter, council and commandery, and the 
beautiful, aye sublime teachings of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish 
Rite." 

I have written upon this particular subject, my dear friends and 
Brothers, in order that 3'ou may thoroughly understand that IF the first 
three degrees do contain the whole of Masonry, the Master Mason will 
never be enabled to comprehend but the rudimentary parts of any of 
them. In fact he will never attain to a thorough knowledge of any one of 
them, until he has been initiated into the higher degrees of the Ancient 
and Accepted Scottish Rite, and then only, will he be enabled to 
thoroughly appreciate the beauty of the Symbolic degrees, and realize 
that although they do not include the whole of Masonry, they do most 
certainly contain the /:cy to the sublime, profound Ineffable, Chivalric 
and Philosophical degrees of the Scottish Rite, which most assuredly con- 
tains the Whole of Masonry. Consequently every aspiring Brother 
who is desirous of fulfilling his first promise, to improve himself in 
Masonry, can never stop at the Third degree, because he has only been 
raised to Liglit and Lije^ so that he may be enabled to continue on to 
higher planes, and to a proper understanding of the profound Wisdom 
that pertains to the " Higher degrees '' in Masonry. As he climbs, his 
view widens out, and his horizon expands. He will begin to realize not 
only the honor that has been conferred upon him, but also the duties and 
responsibilities that belong to all those who have been permitted to 
receive the glorious teachings that are embodied in the various Rites 
and Ceremonies of the "Higher Degrees." One of the first things 
impressed upon the candidate will be that — " Man should not live for 
himself alone." 

I tell yon my dear Brothers, that the " Cable Tow," binds us all in 
fraternal bonds of Love, uniting every Mason throughout the world uni- 
versal, teaching them that by practicing the three principal tenets of the 
Fraternity — Brotherly Love, Virtue, and Truth we may demonstrate to 



590 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

the outer world that Ave not only teach, but practice morality, virtue, and 
are truthful in all our dealings with our fellow man. I assure you, my 
dear Brothers and Friends, that it is the bounden Duty of ever}' Mason 
to be a good and unselfish man, to labor for the benefit of poor strug- 
gling humanity, the advancement of his fellow man ; but above all to 
keep Yas first voiv hy subduing Jiis ou'ii aniv/al passional nature^ and thus 
improve hinisclj in Alasoiiry. 

Brother Albert Pike tells us in "Morals and Dogmas," page 112: 
" Be faithful to Masonry, which is to be faithful to the best interests of 
mankind. Labor, b}' precept and example, to elevate the standard of 
Masonic character, to enlarge its sphere of influence, to popularize its 
teachings, and to make all men know it for the Great Apostle of Peace, 
Harmony, and Good-will on earth among men ; of Liberty, Equality, and 
Fraternity. 

"Masonry is useful to all men : to the learned because it affords them 
the opportunity of exercising their talents upon subjects eminently 
worthy of their attention, to the illiterate, because it offers them import- 
ant instruction ; to the young, because it presents them with salutary 
precepts aiid good examples, and accustoms them to reflect on the proper 
mode of living ; to the man of the world, whom it furnishes with noble 
and useful recreation ; to the traveller, whom it enables to find friends 
and brothers in countries where else he would be isolated and solitary ; 
to the worthy man in misfortune, to whom it gives assistance ; to the 
afflicted, on whom it lavishes consolation ; to the charitable man, whom it 
enables to do more good, by uniting with those who are charitable like 
himself; and to all who have souls capable of appreciating its import- 
ance, and of enjoying the charms of a friendship founded on the same 
principles of religion, morality and philantlirophy. 

" A Freemason, therefore should be a man of honor and of conscience, 
preferring his duty to everything beside, even to his life ; independent in 
his opinions, and of good morals ; submissive to the laws, devoted to 
humanitv, to his country, to his family ; kind and indulgent to his 
brethren, friend of all virtuous men, and readj^ to assist his fellows by all 
means in his power." 

I referred previously to the " cable tow," that binds us all in bonds 
of Love. This investiture comes down to us from ancient India. The 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 591 

god Siva of the Hindu Trinity is very often found represented in the 
character of a contemplative philosopher, with the Brahmanical thread 
around him. In which character he endeavors to teach men the necessity 
of subduing the animal passional nature within their own hearts. At the 
Upanayana^ or Initiation, a boy was not considered worthj^ to receive the 
title Dvi-ja (twice born), until he had been invested with the sacred thread 
and spiritually regenerated by the act of investiture. In fact, no Brah- 
man of the present day has an}' right to be called by any other name 
than I'lpra^ until he becomes initiated and invested with the yajnopvita 
or sacred thread, then he is known as Dvi-ja. This thread or cable 
tow (?) of the Hindu consists of three strands or threads, twisted into one 
thread, and three of these (three-fold strands) twisted together thus make 
a string or thread, of three times three, or nine strands in one. 

Sir William Monier informs us in his " Brahmanism and Hinduism," 
page 378, that when a Brahman is " once invested with this hallowed 
symbol of second birth, the twice born man never parts with it. In this 
respect he has an advantage over his Christian brother. For the latter is 
admitted into the Church by a single ceremony performed in his in- 
fancy, and brought to his recollection by one other ceremony only ; 
whereas the Indian twice-born man has a sacred symbol always in con- 
tact with his person, which must always be worn and its position changed 
during the performance of his dailj^ religious services, constantly remind- 
ing him of his regenerate condition, and with its three white threads, 
united by a sacred knot (which they called braniah granthi) perpetually 
setting before him a typical representation of what may be called the 
triads of the Hindu religion. For example, it is probable that the triple 
form of the sacred thread symbolizes that the Supreme Being is Exist- 
ence, Thought and Joy, that He has been manifested in three forms as 
Creator, Preserver, and Disintegrator of all material things ; that He 
pervades the three worlds, Earth, Air and Heaven; that He has re- 
vealed His will in three principal books called the Rig, Yajur and Sama 
Vedas, with other similar dogmas of the Hindu system in which the 
sacred number three constantly recurs." 

When the Candidate was received into the Indian Mysteries, he was 
compelled to make the circuit of the cavern, being conducted through the 
ceremonies by an expert who held him by the " cable-tow " or sacred 



592 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

thread. Ever}^ time the Aspirant passed the meridian at the South, he 
would be taught to sa}- that he followed the course of the sun god, from 
East to West, and West to East again. In fact, all through the S^^m- 
bolic degrees he represented the sun, going to his death at the winter 
Solstice, being assaulted on his journey by the three wicked aiitumnal 
signs of Libra, Scorpio and Saggitarius, each one in turn attacking him 
on his downward path. Libra is the first to make the assault; then the 
deadlj' Scorpio inflicts a terrible stroke upon him ; but it is Saggitarius 
who strikes the fatal blow with his quivering dart, which gives him his 
death and eventuall}^ lays the sun god low, for after being smitten with 
the fatal dart he staggers on until he -falls dead at the winter Solstice. 

"Morals and Dogmas," 361, tells us that: "The Initiate was 
invested with a cord of three threads, so twined as to make three times 
three, and called Zcntiar. Hence comes our cable-tow. It was an 
emblem of their triuue Deit}-, the remembrance of whom we also preserve 
in the three chief officers of our Lodges, presiding in the three quarters 
of that Universe which our Lodges represent ; in our three greater, and 
three lesser lights, our three movable and three immovable jewels, and 
the three pillars that support our Lodges. 

" The Indian mysteries were celebrated in subterranean caverns and 
grottoes hewn in the solid rock ; and the Initiates adored the Deit}^, sym- 
bolized b}- the solar fire. The candidate long wandering in darkness, 
trul}'- wanted Light, and the worship taught him was the worship of God, 
the Source of Light." 

Jos. E. IMorcombe informs us in the " American Tyler," of Septem- 
ber 15th, 1900: "That in the mysteries of India the aspirant was 
invested with a sacred cord or girdle, which he was commanded to vs-ear 
next his skin, and b}- means of which his conductor might lead him 
through the caves of initiation. It consisted of a cord composed of three 
times three threads, and was said to possess the power of preserving its 
Avearer from personal danger. Virgil says : ' I bind thee with three 
pieces of list, and I carr}- thee three times about the altar.' Pierson, 
without giving his authorit}^, sa3^s that the word cable-tow is derived from 
the Hebrew words ' Kha-Ble Tu,' meaning ' the pledge.' 

" The initiation into the ancient mysteries, occurring in temples or 
other places accounted holy, the aspirant was required to remove his 







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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 593 

shoes that the greater humility might be shown, and also that no pollu- 
tion from the world without might be carried into the sacred precincts. 
When the Egyptians worshipped they removed their foot covering in 
token of reference. ' Worship the Gods with your feet uncovered,' is 
among the precepts of Pythagoras. In the Indian mysteries the aspirant 
was sprinkled with Avater in token of purification and then divested of his 
shoes. Ovid describes Madea as having arm, breast and knee made bare, 
and both feet made slip-shod. Dido according to Virgil, ' Now resolute 
on death, having one foot bare, ascend the altar.' .... 

" Oliver quoting Tertullian says, ' the successful probationer for the 
Persian mysteries was brought into the cavern of initiation; where he was 
received upon the point of a sword pointed to his heart,' by which he 
was slightly wounded.' The Greeks tested the fortitude of the neophyte 
.upon his reception by the infliction of wounds with a heated iron or with 
the point of a sword, and this he must endure without shrinking. 
Entrance into the Mexican mysteries was gained after the candidate had 
been cut with knives or seared with heated stones or iron instruments." 

The course of the candidate in the ancient initiations was from East 
to West by way of the South. He who was conducted through the caves 
of India was instructed to say : " I follow the course of the Sun in his 
benevolent path,'' at the same time making his movements and repeating 
the phrase each time upon reaching the South. On solemn occasions, 
the Druids passed three times in procession about their sacred enclosures, 
and thrice repeated their invocations. Nothing among the Ancient 
Britons was accounted sacred until it had been passed about in proces- 
sion, according to the apparent path of the Sun. Going backward, or 
opposite to the Sun, was a Gothic method of invoking the infernal power. 

The sun was worshipped bj- the Persians, who looked upon it as the 
source of all Light and Life. They saw in its diurnal and annual motions 
the immortality of the soul. In their Mithraic mysteries they practiced 
some of the most horrible cruelties upon all those who crossed through 
their portals for initiation. In fact, history informs us that they actually 
sacrificed some of the Aspirants who could not stand the terrible ordeals 
they had to pass through. These Mithraic mysteries were the principal of 
all others in Rome at the beginning of the Christian Era, or during the 
reign of Trojan. They grew into such terrible repute on account of the 



594 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

horrible cruelties that were practiced during the initiatory services, that 
Adrianus prohibited the Alithraic rites and ceremonies in Rome during 
his reign. But, under that of Commodus (the cruel), they began to grow 
into surprising magnificence and splendor, when the horrible cruelties 
and tortures were renewed and continued. In fact the Emperor himself 
sacrificed a victim to Mithras. These Persian mysteries were generally 
practiced in caves amid the most gorgeous astronomical allegories, 
at which times the most cruel tests were required of all who were 
initiated. 

In the Zoroastrian Caves of initiation, the magnificent stellary vault 
above or ceiling, was adorned with a central sun surrounded by the vari- 
ous planets, and the Zodiac was to be seen, starred in with gems and 
gold. Each star or planet represented the true place upon the roof or 
ceiling, in its relation to the central sun. The candidate in these mys- 
teries was always received upon the point of a sharp sword that wounded 
his naked left breast, and caused the blood to flow freely from the wound. 
If he failed not, he would then be crowned with a circle of olive, and 
anointed with oil, his wound would be dressed, and afterwards he would 
be purified with Fire and Water, and permitted to pass through the 
seven stages of evolution, in order to reach perfection. 

During these ceremonies he would undergo most trying ordeals and 
terrible trials, both mentally and physically, until he reached the topmost 
rung of the ladder of seven rounds. During his ascent, or initiatory path, 
he would pass through the valley of death where he would see the tor- 
tures of the damned in Hell. Eventually he would fall into the midst 
of the blessed, and be received with rejoicings by all the initiated and 
redeemed, who had gone before him, and who were especially assembled 
there to receive him on his arrival ; he having passed through the valley 
of death to the representation of Life Eternal. Then the Archimagus, 
or Hierophant, clothed in most gorgeous vestments would receive him, 
and administer unto him the solemn obligation and vow that bound him 
to Secrec}^ and Obedience ; after which all the various incidents of the 
initiatory services would be explained to him. He would be instructed in 
the true meaning of the legend of Onnuzd, and Ahriman, and intrusted 
with the meaning and nature of the One Absolute, known as Zeruane 
Akherene. 



EGYPT. THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 595 

The similarity of the various rites and ceremonies of the ancient 
mysteries most certainly demonstrates that they all had their origin in 
some ancient and primitive source, and from my own personal observa- 
tions and researches, in the Eastern countries, I firmly believe that they 
have come down to us, as I have hereinbefore stated, — from India or the 
" Land of the Vedas." We also find that the three principal officers are 
always placed in the East, West and South, and in the Indian mys- 
teries they represented the Indian Tri-une Deit}^ — Brahma, Vishnu, and 
Siva. 

No matter where we force our investigations, either in India, Persia, 
Eg3'pt or any of the other Eastern countries, we shall find that the very 
same events have been perpetuated by the use of the same rites, cere- 
monies, and symbols. This clearl}^ demonstrates that although the 
people who practiced those peculiar ceremonies, and taught the same 
grand philosoph}', and believed in the same grand Truths, were in many 
instances, widel}^ separated one from the other ; yet notwithstanding this 
fact, it must prove to the thinking Man and Mason, that it originated in 
some one source, and from some one people. Now I do most firmly 
believe that, that source was India, and that it ramified from there with 
those people who migrated from that country to Persia and the valley of 
the Nile. Thus from the very shadows of the Himalaya Mountains, the 
ver}^ cradle and birthplace of the Ar3'an Race, came the Indian, ]\Iazdean 
and ancient Eg3'ptian mysteries, of which our own beloved Scottish rite 
is a lineal descendant. 

The removal of shoes from off one's feet is customary to-day in 
mau}^ countries, more especiall}' is thig so in Egypt, India, and other 
countries among the natives. This custom is as old as the Aryan Race 
itself. It is peculiar to see the large number of shoes ,lying around in. 
the gateways or entrances to the Alosques of Egypt, Turkey and also 
the temples of India. At some of the Mosques I have visited during my 
travels in man}' of these Eastern countries, I was compelled to remove 
my shoes before they would permit me to enter within its sacred pre- 
cincts, while at others they would furnish me covering to draw on over 
my own shoes, which in this case, seemed to answer the same purpose as 
removing my own. Many of these ancient customs of the East have been 
preserved and handed down from generation to generation, at the same 



596 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

time many others have become obsolete, and a great many entirely 
changed in order to suit another people's ideas. 

The chequered pavement and tessellated border, with the star in the 
center, is very seldom seen upon the floor of our lodge rooms to-day, for 
it has been replaced by more gorgeous colorings, and the lessons which 
they taught are lost to our aspiring candidate of to-day, but future years 
will reproduce them. 

The Ark of the Royal Arch has come down to us from the Ancient 
Egyptians, although we read that Moses was commanded to manufacture 
one (Exodus 25 : 10), for the express purpose of holding the offerings of 
the people, who gave willingly to the Lord. It was considered so sacred 
that it is recorded that the Lord smote, or destroj^ed fifty thousand and 
three score people of Beth-Shemesh, because some of them simply looked 
into the Ark (see ist Samuel 6: 19). The Jews certainly regarded it as 
the most sacred thing belonging to them and their religion, because, 
the}' declared, that it was a token of God's Covenant with His chosen 
people. 

We find that in the ancient Egyptian mysteries, and also in those of 
Greece, they used similar boxes that were adorned very much like the 
Ark of the Covenant. This was long before they knew anything at all 
about the Hebrew people, or what took place in the Sanctum-Sanctorum 
of their temple in Jerusalem. In the early days of Egyptian history, the 
-river Nile was the great highway for those people, and during their 
gorgeous ceremonial processions, when they exhibited many of their most 
sacred symbols, the chief among them was the image of their god or the 
image that represented him, placed in a ba)'i or boat. It was sometimes 
exposed to the public gaze, at other times it was hidden from view by 
being placed inside a box or shrine and deposited in the middle of a boat 
or bari^ wherein was laid the bodies of the embalmed dead, that were to 
be ferried across the river Nile for sepulture in the Libyan hills near 
Thebes. 

These boats were represented, in the paintings of the ancient 
temples, artistically curved at both ends, in the center of which was 
placed the sacred shrine containing either the god himself or his creative 
organs, surrounded by the most sacred emblems of these ancient people. 
Now, it is on just such a model as this shrine, or chest, that the Ark of 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 597 

the Covenant, of the Jewish people, was constructed, and which is said to 
have contained " The tables of the Law, The Pot of Manna, and Aaron's 
budding rod." In the grand processions of these Ancient Egyptians, the 
ark or bail' was richly decorated with most magnificent ornamentation of 
gold and precious gems, representing sacred emblems of the m3'steries, 
and contained, as I have above stated, either the god himself or his 
Ling/tain, or the organs of generation of Osiris, which was emblematic 
of the sun god Ra. 

This Egyptian Ark, or bart, was overshadowed by the wings of two 
kneeling figures of the goddess of Truth, both figures wearing the 
feather of Truth upon their heads. Now if we compare the Egyptian 
Ark with the Hebrew, we shall find a very close resemblance. I do not 
wish to make all these assertions, without proof from other writers, in 
relation to this subject, therefore I will quote you from Brother Hewitt 
Brown, 32°, " Stellar Theology," wherein he says, page 91-2 : 

" The Ark was one of the principal features of the Egyptian 
Mysteries. Speaking of the religious ceremonies of the ancient 
Egyptians, Wilkinson says : ' One of the most important ceremonies 
was the ' procession of the shrines,' which is mentioned in the Rosetta 
Stone, and is frequently represented on the walls of the temples. The 
shrines were of two kinds, the one a sort of canopy, the other an ark, or 
sacred boat, which may be termed the great shrine. This was carried 
with great pomp by the priests, a certain number being selected for that 
duty, who supported it on their shoulders by means of long staves pass- 
ing through metal rings at the side of the sledge on which it stood, who 
brought it into the temple, where it .was placed on a stand or table, in 
order that the prescribed ceremonies might be performed before it. The 
same is said to have been the custom of the Jews in some of their 
religious processions, as in carrying the Ark ' to its place, in the oracle 
of the house, to the most holy place,' when the temple was built by Sol- 
omon,' (i Kings 8). See Ancient Egyptians^ Vol. I, page 267. 

" ' Some of the sacred boats, or arks, contained the emblems of life 
and stability, which, when the veil was drawn aside, were partly seen, and 
others contained the figure of the divine spirit Nef^ or Noii^ and some 
presented the sacred beetle of the sun, overshadowed by the wings of the 
two figures of the goddess of Tliemi or Truth, which calls to mind the 



598 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

cherubim of the Jews, Ancient Egyptians^ vol. I, page 270.' The prin- 
cipal difference between the Jewish and Egyptian Arks is that the 
Egyptian was more like a boat in shape, according to our ideas of a boat, 
while the Jewish ark is described as being of an oblong square form ; 
this, however, it maj^ be observed, was the exact form of Noah's ' ark,' as 
described b}' the Jewish historian in Gen. 6: 14-16. The idea of a boat 
is, therefore, characteristic of both of these ancient emblems, as, indeed, 
the ver}- name ' ark ' denotes 

"This mysterious ark or chest which figured in the Mysteries of 
Egypt much more nearly resembled the Jewish ark in form. After Typhon 
had slain Osiris he enclosed him in a chesi and cast him into the sea {river 
Nile), thus plunging all heaven in grief and sadness. Isis, when she 
learned the melanchol}^ news refused all consolation, despoiled herself of 
her ornaments, cut off her tresses, robed herself in the habiliments of 
mourning, and wandered forth through the world. Disconsolate and sor- 
rowful, she traveled into all countries, seeking the mj^sterious chest which 
contained the body of the lost Osiris. In the meanwhile the chest was 
Avashed ashore at B3^blos, and thrown into the centre of a bush, which 
having grown up into a beautiful tree, had entirely inclosed it. At length, 
however, the tree was cut down by a King of that country, and used by 
him in the construction of a new palace. But Isis finally learned the 
singular fate of the chest, and her persevering love was rewarded by the 
possession of it. The plant which thus indirectly led to the discovery of 
the mutilated bod}' of Osiris was held sacred b}' the Egyptians. 

" The whole stor}' of the death of Osiris and the finding of his body 
is admitted to be an astronomical allegory of the death of the sun-god, 
slain by Typhon when the sun was in Scorpio, which was at that time on 
the autumnal equinox. 

" Plutarch informs us that ' when the sun was in Scorpio, in the 
month of Athyr^ the Egyptians inclosed the body of their god, Osiris, in 
an ark or chesty and during this ceremon}- a great annual festival was 
celebrated. Three days after the priests had inclosed Osiris in the ark, 
they pretended to have found him again. The death of Osiris was 
lamented b}' them when the sun, in Scorpio, descended to the lower hem- 
isphere ; and, when he arose at the vernal equinox, then Osiris was said 
to be born anew.' 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 599 

" The use made of the ark, or sacred chest, in certain Masonic 
degrees, derives no one of its particulars from anything narrated in the 
Bible. On the contrary, it bears so striking an analogy to the ark of the 
Egyptian Mysteries as to at once disclose the original from which it was 
copied. The Masonic ark, like that of the Eg3'ptian Mysteries, is lost or 
hidden, and after a difficult search it was at last found. The Masonic, it 
is true, does not, like the Egyptian one, contain the body of the slain 
sun-god, Osiris. It does, however, contain something symbolically repre- 
senting the true God, and also certain matters which, it is claimed, lead 
to a superior knowledge of him. The analogy is, therefore, perfect, and 
the astronomical allegor}' is strictly preserved." 

Albert Pike in " Morals and Dogmas," page 376, says : " When Isis 
first found the body, where it had floated ashore near Byblos, a shrub of 
erica or tamarisk near it had, by the virtue of the body, shot up into a 
tree around it, and protected it ; and hence, our sprig of acacia 

" In the Mysteries, the nailing of the bod}^ of Osiris upon the chest 
or ark was termed aphanisin^ or disappearance (of the Sun at the Winter 
Solstice, below the Tropic of Capricorn), and the recover}' of the different 
parts of his bod}' by Isis, the Eurcsis, or finding. The Candidat-e went 
through a ceremony representing this, in all the Mysteries everywhere. 
The main facts in the fable were the same in all countries, and the promi- 
nent Deities were everywhere a male and a female. 

" In Egypt they were Osiris and Isis ; in India, Mahadeva and 
Bhavani : in Phoenicia, Thammuz (or Adonis) and Astarte ; in Phrygia, 
Atys and Cybele ; Persia, Mithras and Asis ; in Samothrace and Greece, 
Dionusos, or Sabazeus and Rhea ; in Britain, Hu and Ceridwen ; and in 
Scandinavia, Woden and Frea ; and in every instance these Divinities 
represented the Sun and Moon. 

" The Mysteries of Osiris, Isis and Horns seem' to have been the 
model of all the other ceremonies of initiation subsequently established 
among the different peoples of the old world. Those of Atys and Cybele, 
celebrated in Phrygia, those of Ceres and Proserpine, at Eleusis and many 
other places in Greece, were but copies of them. This we learn from 
Plutarch, Diodorus Siculus, Lactantius and other writers ; and in the 
absence of direct testimony should necessarily infer it from the similarity 
of the adventures of these Deities, for the ancients held that Ceres of the 



000 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Greeks was the same as the Isis of the Egyptians, and Dionusos or Bac- 
chus as Osiris." 

My dear Brothers and Friends, you will see from the above that the 
ark of the ancient Egyptians, and the ark of the Covenant of the Jewish 
people was very much alike, and there is no question in my mind but 
that the Hebrews copied their ark from that of the Egyptians, during the 
time that they were held in captivity or bondage by those people, for 
many of the pictures of the Osirian chest or ark that are to be seen upon 
the walls of the various temples, in the valley of the Nile, will most cer- 
tainly prove to be the pattern by which the Hebrew peoples made theirs. 

1 do not ask you, my dear Brothers, to go to Egypt in order to verify this 
assertion, I simply ask you to look at some of the pictorial descriptions 
of the interior decorations of the Egyptian tombs and temples, or to refer to 
such a work as Kitto's Cyclopaedia of Biblical Literature. Then compare 
the ark of the Covenant with the ark of Osiris, and j'ou will most assur- 
edly agree with me upon this subject. 

Now with respect to what is said to have been the contents of the 
ark of the Covenant, let us consider this matter and carefully examine 
what it is said to have contained. {See Hebrews 9 and 4.) Leaving 
aside Aaron's budding rod (for account of which see Numbers 17th 
chapter) and the Manna which the Lord rained down upon the children 
of Israel when they sighed for the fleshpots of Egypt ; {see Exodus i6th 
chapter), we will confine ourselves to the ^' Book of the Law" and leave 
the rod of Aaron and the pot of Manna out of our consideration. 

In taking up the subject of the " Book of the Law" I feel that it will 
interest every Masonic student, and will prove a most interesting subject 
to all Royal Arch Masons. Their ancient traditions, which have been 
preserved for so long a time within the Chapter, will now have to 
undergo a test of investigation in order to prove the verity of the asser- 
tion, " Book of the Law." But no matter if we are able to prove that it 
never existed, as is generally understood, the teachings that underlie the 
sacred symbol, will ever remain one of the grandest features pertaining 
to the rites and ceremonies of the Holy Royal Arch. 

It is not with any irreverence toward the so-called " Book of the 
Law " that I approach this subject, but it is with the most profound ven- 
eration for the writings contained in the Old Testament. I simply wish 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 601 

to show you, my dear friends and companions, that it could not have 
been, what it is generally supposed to be, the canon of the Old Testa- 
ment and the New combined ; known as the " Holy Bible,'' which is 
generally used in the ceremonies of the Exaltation. 

I have inquired iu many countries by what authority it is used, but 
could get no definite information in relation to my question. Now this 
" Book of the Law " that is supposed to have been found and generally 
used in our Chapters of the Royal Arch is purely and simply the Holy 
Bible. I shall not enter into a long discussion upon the various transla- 
tions of the Bible, or try to prove which one is the most correct, but will 
endeavor to find out something about the " Book that was Lost." 

History informs us that after the captivity, when the Jews were 
rebuilding their temple under their leader Zerubbabel, and while this was 
going on, three ver^^ earnest sojourners applied for and received permis- 
sion to assist in the good work, and that one of the very first things that 
resulted from their labors was the discovery of the " Book of the Law," 
which is said to have been lost since the time when Solomon lived and 
reigned. The " Book of the Law," long lost was now found, and they 
gave praise to the Lord, and from that time it has been preserved with 
other discoveries that were made at or about the same time. 

Now, the only place in the Bible that refers to the discovery of the 
" Book of the Law " is in 2nd Kings, 22-S, where it tells us that Hilkiah, 
the High Priest, told Shapan, the Scribe, that he had discovered the 
" Book of the Law " in the house of the Lord, and possibly this dis- 
covery was the origin of the Book itself There is one thing that is 
positively certain, and that is, the book that was found by our ancient 
companions did not include the New Testament with the account of the 
Life and Death of Christ, therefore we must omit that and confine 
ourselves strictly to the Old Testament, if we desire to find the " Book of 
the Law." 

Now, if we are very careful in our investigations, we shall find that 
there is no certainty about the compilation of the various writings that 
compose the Old Testament, or by whom, or in what manner, or what 
time they were compiled. According to some of the Hebrew Rabbis, 
Kzra was the one who began the compilation of the many historical, 
poetical and prophetical writings that composed the Old Testament, but 



602 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

we do not consider this information as thoroughly reliable. There is one 
thing certain, however, and that is, the compilation was not made until 
after the exile. Ezra may possibly have commenced the compilation of 
this great work, which was, no doubt, continued b}^ his successors, who 
eventually completed it, somewhere about the early part of the second 
century B. c. 

In order to accomplish this great undertaking, it was necessary to 
write new works based upon the traditions of these people, until at last 
the work was finished. We now have the Old Testament, a very valuable 
and important collection of writings ; but it is not the book for which we 
are looking. This compilation is not the " Book of the Law," although it 
ma}^ contain it. Therefore, in order to make our search complete, and 
our investigation thorough, we shall have to strike out those books that 
were composed after the reign of Solomon, and search for the book that 
had been lost for so man}' hundred years. Consequently we will begin 
our elimination with Ezra, Joel, Chronicles, Nehemiah, Ecclesiastes, 
Daniel, Malachi and Jonah, because these works were written after the 
Jews had been freed from their bondage in Persia, and, in fact, long after 
Ezra had' died and their temple had been completed. We must also 
throw out those beautiful poetical works, the Psalms, Lamentations and 
the Song of Solomon, as well as the whole of those, profound philo- 
sophical aphorisms that are contained in the Book of Proverbs. - 

We shall also have to eliminate Samuel, Ruth, Esther, Judges, 
Kings, Micah, Amos, Hosea, and, in fact, we are compelled to exclude 
the whole of the various works, or books, that go to make up the canon of 
the Old Testament, with the exception of the first five books, or the 
Pentateuch, which is composed of Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers 
and Deuteronom}^ Joshua may have been written at about the same 
time that the preceding works were composed ; but we will leave Joshua 
aside, and continue our search in the Pentateuch for the long lost Book 
of the Law. 

There is one thing that is positively certain, and that is, previous to 
the exile, there was no Old Testament such as we have to-day. There 
was, however, a great man}' writings no doubt held in great veneration 
by the Jewish people. The first form that all these promiscuous and 
scattered writings assumed was the Pentateuch, or the first five books 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 603 

compiled and bound together into one volume, which was really and truly 
a compendium of History and Law, beginning with the Creation of the 
Universe in Exodus, and ending with the death of Moses in Deuter- 
onomy. These five books have been generally ascribed to Moses, but 
from the general concensus of opinions of various authorities, I find that 
no less than four different people were the authors of these books. In 
order to converge them, and make them appear the work of one hand, the 
redactor was compelled to put in additions of his own writings, so as to 
make them appear and read as one continuous history. But if you will 
go over these works carefull}', you will easily discover where they have 
been pieced or connected together. After they were completed and 
formed into one volume it was called and known as " The law." 

There are three distinct legal codes in the Pentateuch, and 3'et not 
one of them refers to either of the others, and in some cases they are 
contradictory. Now this fact alone would most assuredly prove that they 
were written by different authors. The first collection is said to have 
been given b}^ God to Moses at Mount Sinai, and is knowm as the '■''Book 
of the Covenant^'' see Exodus, chapter 20. For an account of the second, 
see Leviticus, chapter 26. The tliini and last code, we find in Deuter- 
ononi}', was given to Moses on the East side of Jordan, Deuteronomy 
chapter 4, verse 44 to end of chapter, just before his death in the Land of 
Moab, in sight of the promised land, that the Lord showed unto Moses, 
but into which He would not permit him to enter, see Deut. 34. 

I do not desire to enter into a discussion upon the statement that 
" Moses ivas fiot the sole author of the Pcntateiich,^^ but simply say that any 
companion who is in doubt upon this subject can easil}^ verif}^ the asser- 
tion by searching for the proof and judging for himself 

From the above we find that the Old Testament begins with the 
creation of the world and ends with the prophets, some time during the 
fourth centur}' B. c. After the Babj-lonian captivity we also find that a 
compilation of these writings were collated, and thus formed the Canon 
of the Old Testament. In our search for the " Book of the Law " we 
have been compelled to cut out nearly all the books of that sacred volume 
in order to discover that which had been lost. 

We now find ourselves with the Pentateuch, which contains three 
distinct Legal Codes, to which I have already referred. One of these 



604 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

must be the " Book of the Law," for they existed long before Solomon 
lived and reigned, and it was no doubt one of these that was deposited in 
the ark of the covenant with the Pot of Manna and the Budding Rod. I 
have not gone into this subject as deeply as I would wish, but I have 
given you a very cursory account of my search for the " Book of the Law," 
and thus I leave it in your hands for you to make your own deductions. 

There is one thing, my dear friends and companions, that I am sure 
that we shall agree upon, and that is, the Canon of the Old Testament is 
not the " Book of the Law." In the closing words of this chapter I wish 
to call your attention to the fact that Hilkiah the High Priest found and 
examined the '' Book of the Laiu " that was long lost, but now found, 
which he handed to SJiaphan the Scribe, who also examined it 2iXi$i passed, 
it on to the King, who exclaimed, " HOLINESS TO THE LORD.'' 



^iraimcistott-^^pon bftat tie Ancient ©raftsmen 
toere ai)Iigatety-Efjc Host Wioxti. 



C05 



Rail, dsbas, daughter of the sky, 
dbo, borne upon tby sbtntng car 
By ruddy steeds from realms afar, 

Hnd ever lightening, drawing nigh: 

Sweetly thou smilest, goddess fair, 
Disclosing all thy youthful grace, 
Cby bosom, thy radiant face, 

Hnd lustre of thy golden hair; 

(So shines a fond and winning bride, 
mho robes her form in brilliant guise, 
Hnd to her lord's admiring eyes 

Displays her charms with conscious pride? 

Or virgin by her mother decked, 
^ho, glorjnng in her beauty, shows 
In every glance, her power she knows 

Hll eyes to fix, all hearts subject; 

Or actress, who, by skill in song 

Hnd dance, and graceful gestures light 
Hnd many-colored vestures bright, 

enchants the eager, gazing throng; 

Or maid who, wont her limbs to lave 
In some cool stream among the woods, 
Cflherc never vulgar eye intrudes, 

emerges fairer from the wave) ; 

But closely by the amorous sun 
pursued, and vanquished in the race, 
Chou soon art locked in his embrace, 

Hnd with him blendest into one. 

— Paraphrased from tlie Rig Veda by Dr. Midr, 



606 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 607 



CHAPTER XXVI. 

CIRCUMCISION— UPON WHAT THE ANCIENT CRAFTSMEN WERE 
OBLIGATED-THE LOST WORD. 




i 



HE " Book of the Law" engaged our attention in the closing part of 
the preceding chapter, but I desire further to state that the Canon 
of the Old Testament was not and could not have been in existence dur- 
ing the reign of either David King of Israel, or his son Solomon, and 
that there were only a few scattered and promiscuous writings which were 
no doubt held as sacred by a great man}^ people at that time. These 
writings composed a histor}^ and a variety of legal codes that were con- 
sidered to have been written by Moses, and were known as the Pentateuch 
or the " Law of Moses," but which I have clearly proven were written by 
different people and at different times. 

Now my dear Brothers and Friends, if there was no Bible in exist- 
ence when David bought the land upon which to erect a temple to the 
most High God of Israel, or when our three Grand Masters laid its foun- 
dation, and only a few scattered and promiscuous writings were in exist- 
ence, to which I have referred, — upon what were our ancient Brethren 
obligated at the building of the " House of the Lord ?" Aye and long 
centuries before Moses received the " Decalogue " from God on Mount 
Sinai, or the Jews were a people ! 

This is a question that has often been asked me and ojie that I think 
will interest the " Royal Craft " wherever dispersed. Now my dear 
Fraters, we will endeavor to iind the answer to that question. We know 
positively that those Craftsmen who wrought at the building of the Tem- 
ple could not have been obligated upon the Bible, or the " Book of the 
Law," because they did not exist at that time. Therefore in order to find 
the answer to the question, we must look into the writings of those people 
which give us an account of the building of Solomon's Temple, its 
dimensions, etc. From the same source we will endeavor to find some- 



608 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

fhiug pertaining to the Oaths and Obligations which were used at, or 
about the time this Temple Avas built on Mount Moriah. There is 
one thing certain and that is those people who lived at that time must 
have assumed obligations, and were sworn upon something which they 
considered to be the most sacred symbol known, upon which they took 
their solemn and binding obligations. In order to find what that symbol 
or emblem was, we will search the writings of the ancient Hebrews. One 
of the most sacred symbols or emblems that was known to the ancient 
Hebrew was the organs of generation or man's trinity. This fact is 
demonstrated through all the scriptures and ancient \\ritings of the 
Jewish people. 

We find that there is a great deal of importance placed by God upon 
the virile organs of man, so much so that we find in Genesis 17:2 that 
God informs Abraham that He would make a covenant with him and his 
chosen people, and the sign of the covenant was the circumcision of every 
male child among the Jewish people. Now God was very particular that 
this covenant should be kept by each and every one who belonged to the 
" chosen few," for we find in Exodus 4 : 24 that God would have slain the 
son of Moses, if his mother Zipporah had not mutiliated her child with 
a sharp rock. Thus we find that God, himself, looked upon the virile 
organs, of every man among the Hebrews, to see that the covenant was 
kept to the very letter, thus compelling the " Children of Israel " to 
keep their covenant with him. But the case of Moses' son was not an 
isolated one, for when the Israelites fled from out the Land of Egypt and 
out of the House of Bondage, there were a great many who had been 
born in the wilderness, during their long wanderings, and who had not 
been subjected to the knife when they had reached the required eight 
da3^s. The Lord knew it, and he commanded Joshua to "make slu'rp 
knives and circumcise again the children of Israel the second time," 
together with those who had never felt the knife. .S^^ Joshua, Chapter 5, 
Verses 2 to 5. 

One of the strongest proofs to me of the sacredness of the genera- 
tive organs of man, is in the beginning of the twenty-third chapter of 
Deuteronomy where we are told that he who is wounded in those parts, 
or by some unfortunate accident loses his organs of generation could not 
-enter into the congregation of the Lord. In fact no one of the house of 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 609 

Aaron wa;^ allowed to minister at the altar of the Lord if his generative 
organs were not perfect. See Leviticus 21 : 20. 

From the above we find that the trinity of man (virile organs) was 
looked upon as something different from the other parts of the body, and 
hence was held as the most sacred symbol or emblem known to the ancient 
Hebrews. Such things being the case, we search and find that in the 
days of Abraham and Jacob, the people swore by, or upon, those organs 
of generation, or creative powers, for the simple reason that they con- 
sidered the trinity of man to be emblematic of God the Creator. Through 
all the writings of these people we find this fact demonstrated, for 
instance, in Genesis, Chapter 24, Verse 2, we find the patriarch Abraham 
telling the chief of all his servants to " put I pray thee thy hand under 
my thigh,'' and swear by the Lord God of heaven to do his (Abraham's) 
bidding. Again we find in Genesis 47 : 29 that Jacob asks the same thing 
of Joseph, " put I pray thee thy hand under my thigh," when he made 
him swear to take him out of the " Land of Egypt " and bury him with his 
father, and Joseph obligated himself upon the generative organs of his 
father Jacob. Under the thigh, or loins signified upon the trinity of man, 
or the organs of generation. 

Inman in his " Ancient Pagan and Modern Christian Symbolism," 
tells us that " ' under my thigh,' is a euphemism for the words ' upon the 
symbol of the Creator.' I may point to two or three other passages in 
which the thigh (translated in the authorized version — loins) is used peri- 
phrastically : Genesis 46 : 26 and Exodus i : 5. See Ginsburg in Kitto'.s 
Biblical Cyclopcsdia^ Vol. IH, page 348, .i\ v. Oath. 

" I have on two occasions read, although I failed to make a note of it, 
that an Arab during the Franco-Egyptian war, when accused by General 
Kleber of treachery, not only vehemently denied it, but when he saw 
himself still distrusted, he uncovered himself before the whole military 
staff, and swore upon his trinity that he was guiltless." 

Throughout the whole of the Eastern countries, in the dim dawn of 
prehistoric ages, as well as at the present day, the virile organs of man, were 
and are held in the greatest of veneration by the different peoples of those 
countries. And I do most firmly believe that long before their sacred 
writings were in existence, the craftsmen of those ancient days were 
most assuredly obligated upon either his own trinity, or the phallus, or 
39 



GIO EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

linga stone, a symbol of the procreative forces of Nature. If the candi- 
date was not sworn upon either of the above, he would most certainly 
have to be obligated upon their emblem, such as the — Sun, a flame, a 
burning torch, an erect serpent, or a tree, or stone that represented the 
phallus or creative powers of Man. 

Throughout the whole of India the phallic worship is still practiced, 
as in the days of Guatama Buddha. This peculiar worship is still going 
on in nearly all the temples of India, and can be witnessed bj^ anj- one in 
a great man}^ of the temples, but not in all of them. 

I remember sitting one day at the end of the temple of Elephanta in 
India, trying to decipher some ancient ' inscriptions, when a party of 
young women came into the sanctuary of the god Siva, who in this 
instance was represented under the symbol of the Linga stone, or the 
generative organ. They approached it and making their obeisance, 
scattered flowers before it, and pouring water (from out a chattie or small 
brass vessel that they carried with them) upon the stone one of them 
adjusted her dress, mounted the stone, muttered a few prayers or mantras 
and retired, when another took her place and repeated the performance. 
Before the last of them had finished her devotions I came orit from the 
shadow and watched them. The}^ did not seem to heed my presence at 
all, but kept on chatting" with one another until all had paid their devo- 
tions to the God Siva. 

But I do not wish to enter into a long discussion upon the phallic 
worship, but simply inform 3'ou of the great veneration that is given to 
the creative organs in India and all those eastern countries. They cer- 
tainl}' believed it to be the most sacred emblem in existence and for that 
reason, as well as those above stated, I believe that the ancient craftsmen 
were obligated upon either their own trinit}^, or its symbol, long before 
and after their sacred writings were known. 

No matter upon what the candidate was to be obligated the right 
hand should alwa3-s be brought in contact with the sacred symbol of the 
Deit}-. In case that symbol was the sun, moon, star, or flowing river or 
something that could not be touched, the right hand would be held 
toward the object, with the palm forward and fingers unclosed. This 
mode of obligation refers to the most ancient days when the Vedas of 
India, the Zend-Avesta of the Parsees, and the Rituals of the Ancient 




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EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 611 

Egyptians were not known or written. But when the Vedas, Zend- 
Avesta, Rituals, Pentateuch, Koran, etc., were known and recognized 
as communications from the Deity, they eventually took the place of 
those more ancient methods, although they were often used conjointly. 

Fort, in his " Early History and Antiquities of Freemasonry," tells 
us at page 193, ct scq: "An oath of secrecy was administered to all 
initiates, and their secret conclaves were held at certain times and places. 
After the candidate had been properly instructed in the elements of the 
craft, the old manuscripts inform us, then one of the Seniors or Wardens 
held the book or holy-dome, and the initiate placing his hand upon it, 
took upon himself a solemn obligation to conceal all that he had pre- 
viously been instructed in, and that he would endeavor to preserve the 

the charges of a Mason which were recited to him Everything 

adopted for this purpose was presumed to be endowed with a high degree 
of holiness, and to such extreme was this conception carried, that a slave 
or bondman was debarred from the oath in its prescribed form. 

" It was an almost invariable practice among the Norse nations to 
take the most sacred oaths with the face turned toward the rising Sun, 
and with the hand and fingers upraised. In the Seamund Edda, an oath 
was taken wdth the face to the southern sun. As previously stated, these 
obligations were assumed with the hand resting upon, or touching some 
material object. In nearly all cases this substance was adapted to the 
particular custom of a province, or was any animate or inanimate thing 
readily procured. Pagans swore with the hand grasping a blood smeared 
ring ; Christians obligated themselves \>y the cross, relics of saints, by 
the book (missal) and bell; the latter was in consecrated use during 
ecclesiastic services. Ancient Scandinavians swore upon their swords, 
frequently by grass and trees, as appears from the following citation : 

' Glasgerioii swore a full grete othe, 
By oake; and ashe and thorne.' 

" Oaths were also attested by water, fountains and streams, by rocks, 
cliffs and stones — the latter sometimes white, but the most sacred and 
binding obligation was made upon a blue stone altar. Ancient Northmen 
swore upon Thor's hammer. It w-as no unusual thing for persons 
solemnly to attest an oath by the beard, hair and eyes, or with the hand 



612 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

upon vestments. A judicial obligation was administered by touching the 
judge's staff of office. And for the same reason that warriors swore by 
the sword, also other people, in the less exciting spheres of domestic life, 
used house furniture. For example, travelers grasped the wagon-wheel, 
and horsemen their stirrups ; sailors rested the hand upon the ship's 
railing. Operative masons or stonecutters, of the Middle Ages, perpet- 
uated the Scandinavian custom of swearing upon common utensils, and 
used their tools in the solemn formality of an obligation — a usage still 
adhered to by the modern craft. 

" The right hand was considered indispensable in mediaeval oaths, 
to seize or touch the consecrated object. Frequentl}' the hand was 
upraised in order to bring it in contact with the material object sworn by, 
and at the same time kneeling, divested of hat and weapon, was an essen- 
tial element in the ceremony of assuming an oath. Ancient Jews called 
upon the holy name in attestation of the solemnity of their obligation, 
with the hand placed indifferentl}^ above or beneath the thigh. But the 
most impressive oath taken b}^ the Israelites, was that in and by the 
sacred name of Jehova." 

We also find on page 171, of this same work, that " The charges 
recited were binding upon each and every member of the Masonic 
fraternity, and were sworn to be observed to the utmost, under the 
sanction of God, the holy-dome, and upon the Book." In a note below 
we find a reference to the holy-dome which reads as follows : " Evidently 
derived from a very old form of administering an oath, upon the shrine 
in which the sacred relics of some martyred saint were enclosed. The 
chest or box in which these bones were contained was usually con- 
structed in imitation of a small house. Hence Jwly, with direct reference 
to the sanctity of the relics, and doruiis (Latin for house) by gradual 
elision into holidomus, later holy-dome." 

One of the most interesting subjects to me in Masonry has been the 
Tradition of the Lost Word, which we are told was lost, and that a sub- 
stitute word is given that is to be used until future generations shall 
recover the original. Now, I claim that the " Word " was never lost, and 
that this " Word " has always been in use, not onl}- in the first three 
degrees, but in the Ro3'al Arch as well, where we shall find it distinctly 
pronounced. Therefore, in order that you may be enabled to come to a 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 613 

thorougli understanding of the " Lost Word," I will write upon this 
matter for your especial edification. 

There is an ancient Masonic legend that informs us that " Enoch, 
under the inspirations of the Most High, built a secret temple under- 
ground, consisting of nine vaults or arches, situated perpendicularly 
under each other. A triangular plate of gold, each side of which was a 
cubit long, and enriched with precious stones, was fixed to a stone oi agate 
of the same form. On this plate of gold was engraved the ' word ' or 
true name of God ; and this was placed on a cubical stone, and deposited 
in the ninth, or iozuest, arch. In consequence of the deluge, all knowledge 
of this secret temple was lost, together with the sacred and ineffable or 
unutterable name, for ages. The long-lost word was subsequently found 
in this long-forgotten subterranean temple by David, when digging the 
foundation for the temple afterward built by Solomon his son." Tradition 
informs us that once a year the High Priest of the temple would perform 
the most solemn ceremonies and purify himself for the express purpose 
of pronouncing the True Name, the grand Omnific Word, by which the 
sins of the children of Israel would be atoned for. 

This mysterious Word was always spoken amid the clashing of 
cymbals, or a great noise made by the people, in order to drown the 
intonations of the Grand Word, when uttered by the one man of the 
Jewish peoples who was allowed to do so, and this man was the Grand 
High-Priest himself. Long before the day of the Atonement approached 
the High-Priest would purify himself by fasting and other most solemn 
ceremonies that had to be performed in solitude and prayer. Everything 
depended upon him being pure himself, for upon this rested his power of 
performing the ceremonies and receiving the forgiveness of the sins of the 
children of Israel. If the prescribed rites and ceremonies were not con- 
formed to, the result would bring upon the High-Priest instantaneous 
death, consequently he would be very particular, and when all things 
were ready and the time had arrived, he would pass into the temple, and 
in solemn silence proceed into the middle chamber, the Sanctum Sancto- 
rum, or Holy of Holies, where he would retire behind the veil, and stand 
in the Divine Light, the resplendent presence of the Deit}' himself. 
Then and there, in and by the light of the Shekinah, he would pronounce 
the sacred name that had been placed there b}- Divine command {see ist 



614 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

Kings, 9 : 3), and by that name alone lie would ask for tte forgiveness of 
the sins of the children of Israel. 

" The Jews consider the True Name of God to be irrecoverably lost 
by disuse, and regard its pronunciation as one of the mysteries that will 
be revealed at the coming of their Messiah. And they attribute its loss 
to the illegalit}' of applying the Masoretic points to so sacred a name by 
which a knowledge of the proper vowels is forgotten." 

In reading this account, one would imagine that the sacred word 
belonged solely and exclusively to the Hebrew peoples, but in our re- 
searches we find that it also belongs to the Indian, Mazdean and Ancient 
Egyptian Mysteries, and that it originated in the " Land of the Vedas." 

The Word was also found in the Phoenician Creed, as in all those of 
Asia, a Word of God, written in starry characters, by the planetary 
Divinities and communicated by the Demi-Gods, as a profound mystery, 
to the higher classes of the human race, to be communicated b}^ them to 
mankind and created the world. The faith of the Phoenicians was an 
emanation from that ancient worship of the Stars, which is the creed of 
Zoroaster alone, and is connected with a faith in one God. Light and 
Fire are the most important agents in the Phoenician faith. There is a 
race of children of the Light. They adored the Heaven with its Lights, 
deeming it the Supreme God. 

The Mysteries among the Chinese and Japanese came from India, 
and were founded on the same principle, and with similar rites. The 
word given to the new Initiate was O-nii-to Fo, in which we recognize the 
A. u. M. of the ancient Hindu which represented their trinity of Brahma, 
Vishnu and Siva. The code of Mann, Book II, 265 — states that: "The 
Primitive Holy Syllable, composed of three letters, in which the Vedic 
Triad is comprised, is to be kept secret as another Triple Veda ; He \yho 
knows the mystic value of this Syllable, knows the Veda." 

Albert Pike in "Morals and Dogmas," pp. 584, says that: " Athom 
or Athom-Re, was the Chief and Oldest Supreme God of Upper Eg3^pt, 
worshipped at Thebes ; the same as the o. m. or A. u. m. of the Hindii, 
whose name was iinpronouncable, and who, like the Brehm of the latter 
people, was ' The Being that was, and is, and is to come ; the Great God, 
the Great Omnipotent, Omniscient, and Omnipresent One, the Greatest 
in the Universe, the Lord ; ' whose emblem was a perfect sphere, showing 




PYLON OF TEMPLE, 

KARNAK. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 615 

that He was first, last, midst, and without end ; superior to all Nature- 
Gods, and all personifications of Powers, Element, and Luminaries ; sym- 
bolized by Light, the Principle of Life." 

A. u. M. is the profound salutation of the Aryan Adept, son of the 
Fifth Race, who always begins and ends his devotional concentrations, 
or appeals to non-human Presences with this triliteral word which repre- 
sents, the for ever concealed primeval triune difi"erentiation, not from, but 
/;^, the One Absolute, and is therefore symbolized by the Tetractys (or 
the 4, thus : 1 + 2+3+4=10), which was the symbol of the Kosmos, as con- 
taining within itself, the point, the line, the superficies, the solid; in other 
words, the essentials of all forms. Its mystical representation is the 
point within the triangle. The Decad, or perfect number, is contained in 
the Four as above stated. 

" Om-Mani " murmurs the Turanian Adept, the descendant of the 
Fourth Race, and after pausing he adds " Padme-Hum." This famous 
invocation is very erroneousl}' translated, by the Orientalists, as meaniug, 
" O the Jewel in the Lotus.'''' For although literally, Om is a syllable 
sacred to the Deity, Padme means " in the Lotus," and " Manx " is any 
precious stone ; still, neither the words themselves, nor their sj-mbolical 
meaning are thus really correctly rendered. 

In this, the most sacred of Eastern formulas, not only has every 
syllable a secret potency, producing a definite result, but the whole invo- 
cation has seven different meanings, and can produce seven distinct 
results, each of which may differ from the other. The seven meanings, 
and the seven results depend upon the intonation which is given to the 
whole formula, and to each of its syllables; and even the numerical value 
of the letters is added to or diminished, according as such or another 
rythm, is made use of Let the student remember that ^number underlies 
form, and number guides sound and that Number lies at the root of the 
manifested Universe. 

The mystic sentence, " Om Mani Padme Hum^^^ when rightly under- 
stood, instead of being composed of the almost meaningless words, " O, 
the Jewel in the Lotus," contains a reference to the indissoluble union 
between Man and the Universe, rendered in seven different ways and 
having the capabilitj' of seven different applications, to as many planes 
of thought and action. 



616 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

From whatever aspect we examine it, it means : " I am that I am ; " 
" I am in thee, and thou art in me," or esoterically, " O, my God within 
me." For there is, most certainly, a God in each human being, for man 
was and will re-become God. The sentence points to the indissoluble 
union between Man and the Universe. For the Lotus is the universal 
symbol of Kosmos as the absolute totality, and the Jewel is Spiritual 
Man or God. To the student who would delve into the J't-das and study 
the Esoteric Sciences with double object: {a) of proving Man to be identi- 
cal in spiritual, and physical essence with both the Absolute Principle, 
and with God in Nature ; and (d) of demonstrating the presence iu him 
of the same potential powers as exist in the creative forces in Nature — to 
such an one a perfect knowledge of the correspondences between Colors, 
Sounds, and Numbers is the iirst requisite. As already said, the sacred 
formula of the Far East, " Om Mani Padvie Hutn^'''' is the one best cal- 
culated to make these correspondeutial qualities and functions clear to 
the learned. 

The Veda seems nonsensical to us, only so far as we do not under- 
stand and read it aright. It is the oldest monument of human thought, 
the most venerable record in the world ; and if it contains, as I think it 
does, those philosophical ideas that are reproduced and developed in our 
philosophy and religion, then it is the most interesting monument of 
human thought. 

"We owe to // and the Zend-Avesta, and not to the Hebrew Books all 
our philosophical ideas about God, the immortality of the Soul, and the 
Trinity, and the doctrines taught by St. John and St. Paul." And 
Masonr}' owes to them her Symbols and the doctrines of which these are 
the symbols, as I have explained before. The Sacred Monosyllable is 
unquestionably concealed in certain symbolic Words in Free Masonry ; 
and Aryan Migrations and Victories, no doubt, made it known to the 
sages all over the Orient. 

It is for this reason that I have gone into the subject, so that you, 
my dear Brothers and Friends, may gain " More Light " on the so-called 
" Lost Word." 

There is no question in my mind, but the real Word belonged to the 
Aryan race, long centuries before it was separated into the Iran, and 
Indu-Aryan branches, who originally formed the one great Aryan people 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 617 

and the Irano-Aryan brancli carried away with them the esoteric knowl- 
edge that was common to both. Thus we find it in the Agni^ Ushas, 
Mithra of the Fire worshippers, as their God and his manifestations of 
which we shall speak later on. 

Brother J. D. Buck, 32°, states in his " M3'stic Masonry," page 244, 
et seq.: " In the Tetragrammaton, or four lettered name of the Deity, the 
Greek followers of Pythagoras found a glj'phic by which they both 
expressed and concealed their philosophy, and it is the Hebrew tetrad 
IHVH or — ' Yod, he, van, he,' that is introduced into Masonry with the 
Pj-thagorean art speech. The devout Hebrew, in reading the sacred 
Text, when he came to the sacred tetrad IHVH, substituted the word 
Adonai (Lord), and if the word was written with the points of Alhim, 
he called it Elohoni. This custom is preserved in Masonry by giving 
the candidate a substitute for the Master's Word. The Hebrew tetrad 
' Yod, he, vau, he,' is produced by repeating the ' he.' The root word 
is a triad, and the quaternary is undoubtedly a blind. The Sacred 
Word is found in the mysteries as a binar}^, a trinary, and a quaternary ; 
as with the Hindoos we have the Om and the Azini, indicating different 
methods of pronouncing the sacred name. The Pythagorean Tetrakt3-s 
is represented by numbers, i, 2, 3, 4= 10, and by points or 'Yods' in the 
form of a triangle ; this is called the ' lesser tetraktys ' while a triangle 
composed of eight rows in the same form and containing thirty-six 
' Yods,' or points, is called the ' greater Tetraktys.' This corresponds to 
the three lesser lights, and the three greater lights of the Blue Lodge, 
though the monitorial explanations in the lodge are, to say the least, 
incomplete. In the Pythagorean philosophy both the lesser and the 
greater tetraktys are represented by equilateral triangles, and the points, 
in either case, form the angles of a series of lesser triangles. In the 
lesser tetraktys these triangles are altogether nine, or three times three. 
In the greater they count fortj^-nine, or seven times seven ; and in each 
case the series runs from the apex to the base, i, 3, 5, for the lesser, and 
I, 3, 15, 7, 9, II, 13 for the greater tetraktys, or by a series of odd num- 
bers : while the points before the triangles are formed, run consecutively, 
I, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. These symbols were thus used as ' odd ' and ' even' 
to carr}' a philosophical meaning and to illustrate the doctrine of 
Emanation. 



618 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

A great many Masons are under the impression that the sacred 
Tetragrammaton, the four lettered name of the Hebrew God, generally 
pronounced Jehova/i, to be the true word, but in that they are greatly 
mistaken, for the Grand Omnific Word existed long before the Hebrews 
were a people. 

Now if the long lost Word was really and trul}"- a word, it could be 
just as well concealed in the name of the Hebrew Deity, as in any other. 
But the word we are searching for belongs to the ancient daj^s, when the 
Aryan race separated into the Indo and Irano Aryans, and the JVord 
belonged to both, and we find that it was carried awaj^ by the great 
ancestors of the Persian Magi. At the same time it was retained by the 
Ancient Brahmans in India, and althoiigh we may not know the true 
pronunciation of the Word, we do most certainly believe that its symbol 
is A. U. M. 

Brother Buck says that, " the Hebrews seem to have derived their 
Tetraktys from the Chaldo-Egyptian Mysteries, and these may be traced 
to the Zoroastrian Fire Philosophy, till finally the Word is A.'. U.'. M.'. 
In both Persian or Zend and in Sanscrit, these three letters are found in 
many names that designate fire, flame, spirit, essence, etc. This again is 
glyphic form of expression. Every emanation is a trinity ; and Fire, 
Flame, and Light are the most perfect synthesis of this tri-unity. Con- 
sider the expressions, ' The Lord is a consuming fire ; ' ' Since God is 
Light, and never but in unapproached Light dwelt from eternit}',' etc. 

" The symbol is found in all Scriptures, but onl}' in the Mysteries 
was the meaning thus S3-mbolized made known. Here, then, is the 
origin of all the trinities found in Masonr^^, the plainest of which are the 
trinities of Light, and the most siiperficial explanations are found con- 
nected with the three lesser Lights of the Lodge." 

Brother Albert Pike, quoting from the sacred writings of the far East 
says : " He who knows the M^'Stic value of the Syllable knows the 
Names of which it is the sign and hieroglj-ph and the doctrine which 
these names express and teach, knows the Vedas. For the}- are the 
expression of those thoughts, and are comprised in the Trinity of which 
the Word is the sign and representation. The Word is the three Names. 
It, A. U. M., is the Trinity, as Ahura is the Deity. And this Trinity is 
the essence of the three Vedas, that which has expressed itself in them 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 619 

and whose out-flowings as thouglits they are. It was THE Vedas, before 
they were uttered, and when they existed in it as thoughts unuttered. 
And that it is the essence of all Speech and Words, means that it is the 
divine Intellect, of which all human intellects are rays, and all Speech 
and Words the utterance of these intellects." 

' Triliteral words are supposed to have originated with the birth of the 
Aryan race, and to that end I have delved into the ancient writing of 
many peoples, in order to verify that statement. I soon began to realize 
that the word A. U. IM. is the oldest and most sacred word known to 
man, and I firmly believe that it came down to us from a language that 
antedates all others known to us to-day. I further believe the source 
from which it emanated to have been the lost continent of Atlantis. 

Donnell}' tells us in his " Atlantis " that " INIodern civilization is 
Atlantean. Without the thousands of years of development which were 
had in Atlantis, modern civilization could not have existed. The inven- 
tive facult}- of the present age is taking up the great delegated work of 
creation where Atlantis left it thousands of years ago." 

Our very learned Brother, Albert Pike, also states : " That the Word 
A. U. M. is the oldest Sacred and Ineffable Word, only to be lettered, of 
which we have an}' hint in histor}' or etymology ; that it belonged to a 
language older than any now known to us by any monumental records, 
and of which the Sanscrit, Zend, Persian, Arabic, Phoenician, Egyptian, 
Assj'rian, and Hebrew were but dialects ; that it was a Sacred Word in 
the Paropamisus [a ridge of mountains at the North of India, called the 
Stony Girdle^ or Indian Caucasus — The Author], or Tartarj' be3'ond the 
Himalayas, before the emigrations into Southern Hindustan, Persia, 
Eg3'pt or Chaldea, by which the Aryan Race flowed forth from their 
northern homes ; and that, by these and other successive emigrations, it 
was conveyed everywhere with the mysteries. 

" In the Punjab, the oldest Vedic Hymns were composed, and being 
compiled with some later ones, thousands of 3'ears afterwards, became the 
Rig- Veda, in ten Parts or Books called Mandalas. After most of these 
had been composed, the Indo-Aryans occupied the Ganges countr}-, con- 
quering the dark-skinned native tribes as the}' advanced, until they 
reached the Indian Ocean ; and, in the meantime, the Brahmanic religion 
grew up among them, and the Veda, wholly misunderstood, became the 



620 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 

source or cause of a thousand monstrously absurd legends and grave 
superstitions. 

" Even now, the Brahmanic Commentators only for the most part 
mistranslate and misinterpret the Veda; and not one among them, nor a 
single European Commentator knows what many of the texts mean, nor 
what any of the Vedic Deities (except three or four unmistakable ones) 
really were. Hundreds of texts are a perfect enigma yet, to all of them. 
Hundreds more they all misunderstand. 

" As to the word OM, there is not a Brahman in the world, nor a 
scholar or Commentator in Europe or America, that knows its real origin 
or what it meant and means." 

The word a. u. m. is the original of Amen. Now amen is not a 
Hebrew term, but, like the word Hallelnjah, was borrowed by the Jews, 
and Greeks from the Chaldeans. The latter word is often found repeated 
in certain magical inscriptions upon cups and urns among the Babylonian 
and Ninivean relics. Amen does not mean ^^ so be ii ^'' or " ?'(?r//j^," but 
signified in the hoary antiquity of prehistoric ages almost the same as 
A. V. M. The Jewish Tanaini (Initiate) used it for the same reason as the 
Aryan Adepts use A. u. m., and with a like success. The numerical value 
of A M e N in Hebrew letters being ninetj'-one, the same as the full value 
of Y H V H, twenty-six, and A D o N a Y, sixty-five, or taken together, 
ninety-one. Both words mean the affirmation of the being, or existence, 
of the sexless " Lord " within us. The Yod he van he, y h v h, or male- 
female on the terrestrial plane, as invented b}^ the Jews, and now made 
out to iwe&n Jehovah, but which signifies in reality and literally "giving 
being " and " receiving life." 

The " Secret Doctrine " tells us that " Esoteric Science teaches that 
every sound in the visible world awakens its corresponding sound in the 
invisible realms, and arouses to action some force or other on the occult 
side of nature. Moreover, every sound corresponds to a color, and a 
number (a potency spiritual, psychic or physical) and to a sensation on 
some plane. All these find an echo in every one of the so far developed 
elements, and even on the terrestrial plane, in the Lives that swarm in 
the terrene atmosphere, thus prompting them to action." 

Brother Albert Pike informs us that " this m3^stic word was per- 
petuated among the Hebrews, for those who understood, by the word Amn 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 621 

or Ainen^ for ages meaningless to all men, and all explanations of which 
hitherto have been absurdities, at first intentionally so ; though it is 
identically the name of the Egyptian Mediator-God, the Lamb of God, or 
ram-headed Deity, AMun. In Buddha or Krishna the mysterious child, 
new Incarnation of the Divine Creative Wisdom, the First-begotten, the 
First Emanation, the Logos or Word, were the three persons of the Trimurti 
or Indian Deity, and each was the sacred mysterious never-to-be-spoken 
OM, symbolized by the Palm-tree and the Phoenix. 

" The same word is also found in the Greek Ompha and Omphalos, 
and in the Hebrew word Omn-u-Al which we absurdly read Immanuel or 
Emanuel. Bacchus, too, was called Omadion. In the sign of the Planet 
Mercur}^, Representative of Hermes Trismegistos and of Khiimm, the 
Mediator of the Trinity of Schlomoth, or Wisdom, the Divine Intellect, 
Khumm the Monarch, or the Divine Power, and himself, we find the three 
persons of the Oriental Trinit}', in the Circle, the Crescent, and the Cross 
( 2 ), the Circle representing the Divine Generative Energy, the Crescent 
the Productive Capacity and the Cross the uttered Universe. A. u. m. or 
o. M. is emphatically called, by the Brahmins, the monosyllable ' i. A. M.' 
saj^s Krishna, in the Gliita^ ' of things transient, the Beginning, the Mid- 
dle and the End ; l. A. M. the monosyllable among words.' A Brahmin, 
says Manu, ' beginning and ending a lecture on the Veda, must always 
pronounce to himself the sj'llable O M.' 

" This word was only permitted to be pronounced by the letters, for 
its pronunciation as one word was said to make earth tremble, and even 
the angels of Heaven to quake for fear. It was not the word that 
contained the secret meaning, but the separate letters of the word, as 
in the case with the Hebrew word A. G. L. A., which is the initials of 
four words that compose a phrase ; and with ^'DN, co^nposed of the 
initials of the names of the four ' Worlds,' Atsiluth, Briah, Yetsirah and 
Asiah." 

The A and the O were the good and the evil Principle of the 
Median Magi of Zoroaster, and Manes, the Light, and the Shadow 
or Darkness. Also the}^ represented the IVIale Energ}" and Female 
Productive Capacity ; whence, in the Kabalah, the Sephira Benignity is 
represented as Male, and the Sephira Severity as Female. Hence, also, 
we find them, and the whole vSacred word, in the Latin verb amo, I love ; 



622 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

as in the name of the Great Egyptian God Athom, and in the Median 
and Persian Ormuzd, Ahriman and Mithras. 

Sir Monier Williams informs us in his " Brahmanism and Hindu- 
ism " that " this most sacred of all Hindu utterances, made up of the 
three letters A. u. m., and symbolical of the triple manifestation of the 
Supreme Being in the Tri-murti or Triad of gods, Brahma, Vishnu and 
Siva, is constantly repeated. It is as sacred as the name Jehovah with 
the Jews, but not too sacred for utterance. 

" Manu describes it as a monosyllable, imperishable and eternal as 
the Supreme Being himself After Om comes the utterance of the names 
of the three worlds, Earth (Bhur), Atmosphere (Bhuvah), Heaven (Svar), 
to which are often added the four higher heavens, Mahah, Janab, Tapah 
and Satya. The utterances of these seven names — called the seven 
Vyahritis — preceded in each case by the syllable Om, is an act of homage 
to all the beings inhabiting the seven worlds. It is supposed to induce 
purity of thought, and to prepare the worshipper for offering up his first 
prayer." 

The Bactrian King Zarathustra (Golden Splendor) was called b}' the 
Greeks Zoroaster. He revived the ancient relio-ion of Ahura Mazda and 

o 

developed an extinct civilization that had existed thousands of years 
before Zarathustra was born. This hoary civilization existed on the 
Plateau of Iran, that extends from the valley of the Indus to the valley 
of the Euphrates on its western boundary and the whole surrounded by 
vast mountain ranges. It derived its name Iran from the original name 
of the Race " Eron,^^ who first settled upon that high table land, that is 
located between the Hindoo Kush and river Oxus. This location may be 
said to be the cradle of the religion of both the Medes and Persians, and 
also the birth place of Zarathustra himself The date of this extinct 
civilization is lost in the hoary ages of antiquit}-, and like the birth of 
this celebrated Adept, king and reformer, it is very difficult to find the 
exact date. 

Our revered Brother, Albert Pike, in his Filiation of Ideas, tells 
us that, " Aristoteles and Eudoxus, according to Plinius, place Zarathus- 
tra six thousand years before the death of Plato ; Hermippus five thou- 
sand years before the Trojan War. Plato died 348 B.C., so that the two 
dates substantially agree, making the date of Zarathustra six thousand 



EGYPT. THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 623 

three hundred, or six thousand three hundred and fifty years before our 
era. Baron Bunsen, whose faith as a Christian is unimpeachable, assigns 
a date several thousand years earlier than that, to the first Aryan 
Emigration; while he assigns to the legendary Egyptian King Menes 
only the date of 3,645 B.C. It is certain that Zarathustra lived in 
Bactria, and that manj^ ages passed before the Iranian race had so 
increased as to have emigrated to and conquered in succession Margiana, 
Parthia, Media and Persia, and to have become the great and wealthy and 
luxurious people over whom Kurush (Cyrus) and Darayvuch (Darius) 
reigned." 

Ahura Mazda was, to Zarathustra, precisely what God is to us, a 
Spirit (in the vagueness of that word); a Power, Force and Person, yet 
not cognizable by the intellect, and of whom no definition could be 
attempted. He was The Father, in the sense in which the equivalent 
of that word was then used. Fire being his " Son," He was Father of 
the Fire, i.e., its Source and Producer; the Substance from which it 
flowed forth, the Source of His Emanations. Aditi, Space, was Mother 
of the Planets, because in it their being began. Daksh, Strength, was 
Father of the Fire, because it caused the friction that produced the Fire 
from the wood ; as Rudra, the potency of Fire which causes rarefaction, 
and ascension, and movements in the air, was " Father " of the Winds. 

Zarathustra's Avesta (" the Law") or the Zend-Avesta ("Comment 
on the Law ") embodies a great deal that had been written in the early 
language of the ancient Persians, consequently it is of the greatest im- 
portance to all those philologists who are desirous of comparing the 
various early Aryan tongues. The ethics and religious teachings of these 
ancient people are also of the greatest importance, especially to those who 
are interested in the religion of the oldest inhabitants of Iran or ancient 
Persia. 

The language in which the Zend-Avesta was originally written, from 
all we can learn, was with the arrow head, or wedge shaped cuneiform 
letters like those that are still to be found carved upon the rocks in 
Persia, where they are to be seen to-da}', perfectly legible, although they 
have been forgotten for more than two thousand years. They have re- 
mained there perfectly unintelligible, until our Scholars and Students 
have discovered their real meaning, consequently we are enabled to inter- 



624 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

pret and understand the dead language of these people, just as we are 
enabled to decipher and comprehend the meaning of the hieroglyphics that 
belonged to the ancient Egyptians. Thus we are enabled to compare 
Zarathustra's system of Theology. 

Ahura-Mazda or Ormuzd was worshipped as the Wise and Good 
principle that dominated the Kosraos, and he is always represented by 
fire, light, or the sun, which was called by these ancient people the Son of 
Ahura-Mazda, who was himself the Supreme Diety of the followers of 
Zarathustra. 

Albert Pike says that " Ahura-Mazda, the Light-Radiance, was the 
Supreme God, the God of Gods, Source, Origin, Creator, Father of All ; 
the Light, his Manifestations, and Out-shining, the Celestial Luminaries 
His Creatures through and by which produced from Him, He revealed 
Himself, His Self as Light Essence. 

" Cpenta Mainyu, was His Intellect-Self, God as Intelligence or 
Mind, the Divine Intellect, considered as a Person but imminent in the 
Deity. And Vohu-Mano Mind-being Intellect with outward being, the 
Divine Intellect, Cpenta Main^'U, revealed, and acting in the Universe was 
the Utterence, Effluence, Emanation, Out-flowing of the Divine Wisdom ; 
the Logos or W^ord of Plato, St. John and the Gnostics. 

" Vohu-Mano reveals Himself in every Aryan Intellect. All good 
Thought, all true Intelligence is Vohu-Mano inspiring Humanity and 
revealing Himself in it. The Mantras, or Prayers, Hymns and all good, 
and righteous Words, the Vedas, and Gathas, are His ' deeds,' his utter- 
ances, his Words and Speech." 

Let me quote you a few lines from the Avesta so that you may better 
understand the teachings : " I celebrate the glorious Ormuzd, the great- 
est and best; all-perfect, all-powerful, all-wise, all-beautiful, all-pure, sole 
source of true knowledge, and real happiness ; him who hath created us, 
him who hath formed us, him who sustains us, the wisest of all intelli- 
gences. 

" Zoroaster asked, what was the Word existing before the heaven, 
the water, the earth, before fire the Son of Ormuzd (the sun), before the 
whole existing world, before every good thing created by Ormuzd ? Then 
answered Ormuzd : — It was the All of the Word Creator, most holy Zoro- 
aster, and he in the existing world who remembers the All of the Word 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 625 

Creator, or utters it ivhen remembered^ or cJiants it when uttered^ or cele- 
brates it wlicn chanted^ his soul will I thrice lead across the bridge to a 
better world, a better existence, better truth, better days." 

Thus we find that a sacred trilateral Word or monosyllable existed 
among all the ancient people of the earth, and in the Indian, Mazdean, 
Egyptian, Hebrew and others we have most assuredly shown it to you. 
For in the Indian we find it hidden in the names of the triune Deity, 
Brahma, Vishnu and Siva. In the Mazdean we find the sacred Word con- 
cealed in Ahura-Mazda, Cpenta-Mainyu, and Vohu Mano, and also in 
Agni Fire, Ushas the Dawn, and Mitra, the Morning Star. 

In the names of the ancient Egyptian Deities we find it hidden in 
Athom, Amon, or Khem-Amun. And in the Hebrew we are enabled to 
recognize it in Adom, Khurom, as well as in the Greek, Ompha, and 
Omphalos. 

In the teachings of our Fraternity we find the sacred Word or mono- 
syllable hidden in the so-called Hebrew names of the three wicked ones 
Jubelfl, Jubelfii, Jubeluwz, but as these names were most assuredly not 
Hebrew they were invented for the express purpose of concealing the sacred 
Word, and what makes it doubly sure, is that it is also given in the sub- 
stitute Word itself, and as we climb the ascending ladder, we find it again, 
but this time vibrating under the living Arch. 

Albert Pike informs us that, — The Mason, in his Lodge, surrounded 
b}' the Venerable Symbols of the Orient, sits, symbolicall}^, in the centre 
of the Universe, and in the immediate presence of the Deity who made and 
rules it. He has been robbed, it is true, of that great Symbol, the Master — 
Mason's Word, while those whose predecessors took it, dispute among 
themselves what it is ; and he has received in lieu of it onlj' a Subsitute, 
which he may have been told means, " Marrow in the bones," or, " What 
is this the Builder ? " and which having no symbolic meaning to him, and 
no sanctity, is valueless. 

But the Great triads remain, and he may, with their aid, recover the 
lost Word. Each of these is a symbol of the Deit}', and before each he 
should bow in silent adoration ; for they have come to him from a Past 
that had ended before History began. The Master is Hermes, the 
Divine Word, Utterance, and Revelation of the Divine Wisdom ; the 

Senior Warden represents the Divine Omnipotence ;_ and the Junior 
40 



626 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY., 

Wardeu the Harmony and Beaut}' that are the result of the equilibrium 
of Infinite Wisdom and Infinite Power. 

I have often told you in the early pages of this work, in speaking of 
the esoteric teachings of Masonry, that every zvord and symbol contains a 
most profound meaning, and every Tradition and Allegory embodies far 
more than is dreamed of by those who have not seen the Light. There- 
fore, in order to thoroughly comprehend what the Words, Symbols, Tra- 
ditions, etc. signif}^ we must give them our most profound attention, ever 
remembering that the Symbol must not be taken for the things 
sjmibolized. 

We are told in the "Sohar'' III, page 152 ef srt/, that: " We must 
believe that every word of the Doctrine contains in it a loftier sense, and 
a higher mj^ster}'. 77/r narratives of the Doctriiir arc its cloak. Woe 
unto him who takes the covering for the Doctrine itself! The simple look 
0)ily at the garmoit, that is, iipon the legends of the Doctrine. They 
know no more. The Adepts, on the contrar}-, see not the cloak alone, 
but that ivhicJi t/ie cloak covers Ever}' Word Iiidcs in itself a pro- 
found meaning. Every leorinl contains more t/ian the evoit zchich it 
seems to recite. This H0I3' and Profound Doctrine is the true Doctrine." 
And right here, my dear Brothers, let me tell 3'ou that : He 
who thoroughly nnderstands the Holy Doctrine, Knows the Roy.al 
Secret. 

Albert Pike, in his readings, tells us that " There are, perhaps, few 
thinking Masons to whom it has not seemed strange that the True 
Word, promised to ever}' IMaster Mason, is not given to every one, 
but only a substitute that is not an approximation to the lost 
Word, but a mere trivial, ordinary Pass- Word not even alluding to 
the Deity. The Royal x\rcli American degree, is a modern invention, it 
perpetuates the Triangle, derived from the degree as known in England, 
and places on the sides of it the word, Jah, Bel, and On, in some regions 
modified into or replaced by Jehabuluim, or J.a.buluj:. The thi^e words 
first mentioned are, in the Hebrew, H', ^i'2, and JX or px ; two of which 
only, at the most, are tri-literal ; and the whole do not make three times 
three. I doubt if they are not a modern substitution by mere guess, for 
Jabulum or Jehabulum, a word said to be inscribed on one of the nine 
arches, and the name of an ofl&cer of the Lodge of Perfection. 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 627 

" It is true, what is generally understood to be the Word of a Master- 
Mason, was at one time given in the Master's degree; but not as found 
amid or under the ruins, at the rebuilding of the Temple. Everything 
that relates to that rebuilding has a concealed reference to the destruction 
and hoped-for revival of the Order of the temple." 

What is most worth knowing in Masonry is never very openl}' 
taught. The symbols are displayed; but they are mute. It is by hints 
only, and those the least noticeable and apparently insigniiicant, that the 
Initiate is put upon the track of the hidden secret. K word seemingly 
used at random, and as it were by chance, long escapes notice, and at 
last attracts the attention of some enquiring mind, and gives the clue 
that leads to new discoveries. " Many of these, by the manipulations of 
improvers of the work, and audacious mediocrity, like that of Preston and 
Webb, have disappeared forever and meaningless trivialities have taken 
their places. Some remain, proofs of the great antiquity of Masonry, 
much more convincing than all the babble of those whose business is to 
invent, and pervert, and not discover." 

Masonry tortured out of shape by these interpreters, no longer 
Secret, and the Holy Doctrine is no longer the Sanctum Regnuni or Holy 
Empire, and its ceremonies become trivial and puerile. No greater 
insults have ever been offered to the human understanding than most 
commentaries upon the Blue degrees. Every Brother will have to find 
the proper definition of the Master's Word for himself, just as he will 
have to discover the true meaning of Solomon's Temple, the Holy Doc- 
trine, or the Royal Secret. All those who have passed through our 
portals and received the Light, will no doubt speculate upon the " Lost 
Word," but unless either he or they, are students of our symbology they 
will never believe that it lies concealed in the Third degree, consequently 
they will never recognize the key to it, or the tri-literal word that com- 
poses it. But if by deep thought and earnest study they discover this 
long lost Syllable, it will have no very great signification to them, in 
fact, they would hardly believe that it was the " Long Lost Word " of 
which they have the substitute. Yet if they examine thai, very studi- 
ously, they will find that it has been carefully hidden in the substitute 
word itself. After either he or they have discovered the Word it will 
have no peculiar meaning to them, because they do not know that every 



628 EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY. 

letter in the alphabet, whether divided into three, four, or seven septuaries, 
or forty-nine letters, has its own color or shade of color. But let me 
assure you, that he who has learned the colors of the letters of the alpha- 
bet, and the corresponding numbers of the seven and the forty-nine 
colors and shades, on the scale of planes, and forces, and knows their 
respective order in the seven planes, will easily master the art of bringing 
them into affinity or interplay. 

No matter where we search for the " Long lost Word " it takes us 
back to the language used by the great ancestors of our race the Indo- 
Aryan and although its true meaning has been lost to the Fraternity in 
general ; yet I firmly believe that it is known and understood and that it 
is still pronounced by some of the descendants of the ancient Hindus and 
Brahmins whose lives, have, like their ancestors been devoted to the 
upbuilding of the human race. No matter where we force our investiga- 
tions, we shall most assuredly go back to the A. u. M. of the " Land of 
the Vedas." 

Brother Buck informs us in " Mystic Masonry '' : " The legend of 
the Lost Word and the Potency of the Ineffable Name are inseparable. 
They are the glyphics of Paradise Lost, and Paradise Regained ; or of the 
Fall and the Redemption of man. So also is the legend of re-building 
the temple, a glyphic of Initiation, which is the same as Regeneration 
and Evolution. 

" This ancient Wisdom belongs in a special sense to Masonry, for it 
has done most of any organization of modern times to preserve the 
ancient landmarks, and has honored and protected the sacred symbols. 
If Masonry has made only a superficial use of these hoary secrets, and 
their deeper meaning is still unknown to the craft, it is equally unknown 
to all others, except as the result of genuine initiation. One may know 
that a thing exists, where it is to be found, and that it is above all price, 
without knowing, to the last analysis, what it is. Such is the secret to 
the Lost Word, or the Ineffable Name. Its secret lies in exact vibrations 
under mathematical and synchronous relations ; and its Law is Equi- 
librium, or Eternal Harmony. 

Beginning with our Blue Lodge degrees we shall find this triliteral 
word, as I have before said, in the names of the three wicked ones Jubel*?, 
Jubeh^ and Jubeluw/, which forms the sacred monosyllable, and upon close 



EGYPT, THE CRADLE OF ANCIENT MASONRY, 62^' 

investigation of these names we will most assuredly discover, that they are 
mere inventions, wherein to conceal the Sacred Word from all those who 
were not ready to receive it, and yet to preserve it for future ages, when 
it could be given back again to be used instead of its substitute, although 
(as I have previously stated) a careful search in that word itself will 
reveal to us its presence. In fact when a companion Mason is preparing 
for work, among the ancient symbols of the hoary ages of a prehistoric 
civilization, and amid the ruins of the temple, to search for the " Long 
lost Word," he will hear it as agreed, in unity, under the living arch, 
when if he be a student he will stand bewildered and perplexed, unable 
to hardly understand what he hears, and yet he will know that there is a 
far more sacred meaning to it than is generally understood by the great 
majority and he will intuitionally know that the Lo?ig Lost is not a 
Word, but a SOUND 




TT / \M 



Dear Brethren of the Mj^stic Tie, 

The night is waning fast, 
Our work is done, our feast is o'er, 

This song must be our last ; 
Good night, good night, the farewell cry, 

Repeat the parting strain, 

Happy to meet, Sorry to part, 

Happy to meet again. 

— Final Toast. 



INDEX, 



PAOIi 

A BRAHAM 49 

'^ Abu Girga and vicinity 423-424 

Absolute, attributes assigned to . ... iSt 

the unmanifested 194 

definition of, by Paracelsus .... 194 

Abydos, ruins of 477 

description of 478 

Necropolis of 480 

Acropolis 3 

Adonis 75 

^schylus 328 

Age of steel 51 

Agricultural land divided into 149 

Albert Nyanza 77 

Alcestos crucified 33 

Ale.xandria when founded 3 

when captured 3 

description of 3 

donkey boys of 4 

Grand Square 5 

Libraries 7 

harbors of 10 

my first visit to 4 

population of 12 

temperature of 20 

Masonic Lodges in 21 

Catacombs in 11 

average rainfall 16 

Allahabad 494 

incident on my way to 495 

Altruism 493-494-498 

Amasis, partial to Greeks 32 

story of 33 

was a wise king 34 

issued his famous edict 43 

Amazon river 76 

Amen Ra 45 

Amenti or Hades 63 

Lord of b4 



PAGB 

Osiris Judge in - . 65 

Soul passing through loS 

Ammon or Amun 76-82-390-391 

Amru 3-9-'5 

A. and A. Scottish Rite 21-54 

any one interested in 37 

descendant of the Mysteries .... 56-87 

teaches the same grand Truths ... 70 
has now become a teacher of great 

truths 99 

is a preacher of Liberty 100 

exists for the purpose of . . • . . . in 

Metaphorical description of ... . 224 

Truths taught in the 227 

Symbols of our 256-335 

teachings of the • • 395 

unfolds to her postulants 491 

interesting scenes to the 563 

grand Truths embodied in the . . . 587 

Ancient Egyptian writings 86-87 

Mysteries are to be found in every 

religion 65 

like the inhabitants of to-day ... 128 
were the first to disclose the path to 

the Gods 233 

belief in a future life 306 

belief in transmigration 307 

understood the immortality of the 

soul 309 

on the human soul 310 

worshipped the Sun and Moon . . . 395 

named every star that shines in space 402 

Ancient Masonry 17 

proof of 35 

Anubis 38-53 -73-74 

Apis or Hapi 264 

Apollonius of Tyana 331 

Apron — See white leather apron .... 

Apries 3 

631 



632 



INDEX. 



PAGE 

Ark of the Covenant 141 

of the Royal Arch 596 

used by the Greeks and Egyptians . 596 

contents of the Jewish 597 

comparison of the Egyptian and 

Hebrew 597 

use of, in the Ancient Mysteries . . 599 

Arab Mason was taught 141 

could not have been obligated . . . 141 

Archimedes was born 49 

said to have invented 49 

Armenia 76 

Arnold, Sir Edwin 66 

Arundel Marbles 35 

Art of weaving 52 

Aswan, or Syene 83 

location of 569 

shadowless well at 569 

description of the town 569 

articles to be purchased there . . . 570 

difference between the people at . . 570 

description of the quarries 571 

camel ride to Mahatta, fron' .... 572 

Asyut 33 

arrival at 470 

description of 470 

manufactories at 470 

location of town 470 

Astral body 351 

account of 353 

Atman, or Atma 361 

description of 361 

Athens 50 

Athor or Hathor 73 

Atbara 78-79 

BABYLON 19 

Babylonian Kings 76 

Baedeker 62-84 

Bali of Orissa Crucified 331 

Baliana, town of 477 

description of . 477 

Bahr-el-Gebel 77 

el-Ghazel 77 

el Azrak 77 

el Nil 77 



PAGH 

Baptism does not belong exclusively to 

any sect 333 

its use by the Christians 333 

Barbarian, derivation of the word ... 571 

Egyptian opinion of 571 

Battle of the Nile 154 

Behbit-el-Hagar 56-57-59 

Beni Suef 413 

our Dahabiyeh at 414 

Beni Hassan arrived at 432 

rendezvous for thieves . . ■ ... 432 

trip to the tombs and grottos of. . . 433 

pro-doric columns found here . . . 433 

description of tombs 434 

Black Sheep 442 

Blue Lodge ceremonies 18 

degrees demonstrate 136 

Bolbitine 78-154 

took its name from . .,j.,, 154 

Bombay, India 112 

a trip to Elephanta, from 112 

Book of the Law 600 

a search for the 601-602-603-604 

Books how collected 7 

classification of 8 

numbers in the Soter 8 

numbers in the Serapeum 8 

Botany of Egypt 16 

Boston Museum of Fine Arts 45 

Brain, the 196 

does it require a brain to direct . . 238 

is not the organ of the mind . . . 239 

does not secrete thought 239 

intelligence functions without the . 240 

is not the producer of thought . . . 241 

British Museum 30-51 

plants 16 

Bubastis or Tel Basta 42 

location of 42 

description of its ruins \ 43 

temple sacred to 43 

if a cat or dog died at > 46 

what is found in the ruins 45 

Buddhi the Sixth principle 360 

definition of 360 

Buto identified as Latona ^9-73 

guards Bubastis 69 



INDEX. 



633 



PAGE 

CABLE Tow 589 

binds us all in bonds of love . . . 590 

of the Hindu 591 

Cairo 20-81 

capital of Egypt 201 

location of 201 

founded by 201 

original name of 201 

donkey boys of 211 

description of 211 

temperature at 219 

Canopic Jars dedicated to 298 

earliest records of 298 

what Porphyry and Plutarch said 

about 29S 

my opinion of 298 

Cambyses 76 

was an initiate 28 

officiated in the temple 29 

Camel and camel riding 573 

description of 573 

Catacombs 11-15 

Cataracts, to live below the 76 

Cause and effect 66 

the first 176 

time is the first great 187 

thoughts on 286 

no confession or repentance can 

change the law of 4S8 

Csesareum 6 

founded by 15 

description of 15 

Champollin, his Grammaire Egyp- 

tienne 86 

Children of Light 36 

Chrisna of India 317 

Christian emblem and description of its 

origin 282 

Christ Jesus 50-112 

down from the cross in 

crucified on Calvary 282 

not the only Saviour 282 

Circumcision 60S 

Cleopatra's Needles were brought from 6 

Colossi at Thebes 511 

a description of 511 

measurements of the 512 



Colossus, picture of the transportation of a 
Consciousness, everything is dowered 

with 

all nature pulses with life and . . . 

being inconceivable without change 

thoughts on 

Copts are the descendants of 

language of 

Craftsmen and their handiwork .... 
Cross represents a profound symbol . . 

with the man upon it 

with an oval it is purely an Egyp- 
tian emblem 

Cyril, Archbishop 



pvAHABIYEH, pleasures of a . . . 
' — ' description of the crew of our . . 

first day on board 

Damascus, swords of 

Dams or reservoirs 

constructed by Mohammed Ali . . 
Dark Ages 

what brought on 

Dashoor, pyramids of 

discoveries made there 

Dead, disposal of the 

by the Hebrews and Romans . . . 

by the Parsees 

by the Ancient Egyptians 

Death, there is no 

what we call 

cannot destroy what man has sown 
Delta of the Nile, formation of 

description of 

Demotic, was used principally by . . . 
Denderah, temples of . .' 

description of interior 

Der el-Bahari 

where the royal mummies were 

found 

Divine Essence 

principle manifests itself 

thoughts on 

Druses, founding of the 

doctrines of the 

laws of the 



PAGE 

465 

117 
118 
196 

255 
86 

87 
228 
281 
282 

289 
12 



376 
414 

415 
51 
83 

152 
10 

13 

373 
374 
293 
294 
296 
297 
224 

439 
488 

153 
156 
87 
481 
4S3 
515 

515 

81 

185 

196 

131 
134 
144 



634 



INDEX, 



PAGE 

Duty of one Mason to another 3 

we owe our fellow man , . 498 

EDFU, arrival at 563 

description of the temple .... 565 

Furlong's comparison 565 

Ecclesiastes, thoughts on 44S 

Egypt 16 

her former grandeur 40 

memories of 40 

her first inhabitants brought ... 227 

all philosophers and sages visited . 232 

Egyptian civilization 38 

ffy 41 

architecture 74 

splendor 82 

temples were used for initiation . . 538 

Ekmin, town of 476 

description of 476 

Elephanta 18-112 

description of 113 

an incident in tlie cave temple 

of . . . .• 610 

El-Kab and its rock tombs 562 

a very interesting place to visit . . 562 

description in the tombs of Paheri 563 

Embalming the dead in Egypt .... 297 

when the body was given over for . 297 

after the incision 298 

description of 298 

after the viscera had been removed 299 

three methods prevailed in ... . 300 

after they were 300 

reached perfection during the . . . 301 

Esbekiyeh, public garden of Cairo . . 215 

description of 215 

Eshne, arrival at 560 

a visit to the temple of 561 

Evolution 1 13-1 14-310 

Extradition of the Ancient Egyptians . 578 

FAYUM, the 38 

delightful place to visit 38 

description of 381 

site of Lake Moeris 381 



PAGS 

length of the valley 382 

many interesting ruins here .... 383 

Labyrinth located here 384 

Feather of Truth 64 

Feshn arrived at and passed 421 

Final Toast 629 

Flora of Egypt 16 

Flowering season 16 

Force or Energy 236 

Freedom of Thought 488-492 

Free Mason and origin of the words . . 85-S6 

the word verified our rituals .... S5-86 

why we are called 86 

the name proves its antiquity ... 86 

Free Masonry, the real secrets of . . . 400 

Free secular schools 500 

plotting against 500 

GALILEO, where and when bom . . 49 

said to have invented 49 

Garden of Eden 18 

Garter, Order of the 345 

account of its origin 345 

the vesture of the 346 

Gawazee, or dancing girls 560 

are of the lower class 560 

were driven away from Cairo . . . 560 

effects produced by this act .... 561 

description of their dances .... 561 

Gebel-et-Ter (Bird mountain) 426 

account of 428 

Gebel Shekh Embarak 422 

Gizeh . • . . . . 30-49 

Museum of . . 31 

Glass, Malleable 50 

blowers of Thebes understood the 

metallic o.xides 51 

God, a Mason's belief in 173 

there is One Supreme Infinite '. . . 174 

therefore is a mystery 176 

does not think 181 

according to Pythagoras 181 

poem on 182 

worshipped under the form of fire . 187 

and Truth are inseparable 190 

is One 195 



INDEX. 



635 



PAGE 

Golden Fleece, account of the 341 

Order of the 342 

founded by 342 

two orders of the 343 

decorations of the Order of the. . . 343 

Goodsell, Bishop of Tennessee 14 

Greek School of Philosophy 12 

destruction of the 12 

TJ AGAR SILSILIS, rock tombs at . 565 

A •'■ width of river at 565 

description of quarries at 566 

ramblings at 566 

Hagar-esSalam (stone of welfare) . . . 422 

Harvesting in Egypt 150 

Harbors of Alexandria 10 

description of 10 

of Port Said 127 

He wlio injures another 66 

Hebrews were expert engravers .... 51 

manners and customs of the .... 584 

method of killing beeves 584 

high positions held by the 584 

Christ was a 585 

a description of the exalted positions 

attained by 586 

the symbols of Masonry have been 

preserved by 5S6 

Heliopolis, location of 215 

a visit to the ruins of 216 

description of a trip to 216 

Hebrews called this place Beth- 

Shemesh 218 

the Phcenix came to this city of . . 218 

was called the fountain of the Sun . 223 

the Grand East of Egypt was in . . 223 

Heliodorus 81-S5 

Hesus of the Celtic Druids 326 

Hieratic 86 

derived from 85 

Hiram Abift' 140 

King of Tyre 16 

Hieroglyphs 86-87 

Hieroglyphic inscriptions 86 

Holy Doctrine 20-28 

subUme truths of the ... . . 491 



PAGE 

Homer's Iliad written on a skin .... 50 

Horus 39-41 

represents the sun in full power . . 57 

battled against Typhoon 63 

represents resurrection 63 

guarded by Buto 69 

Human Will 67 

Hypatia murdered 12 

TAOOFNEPAUL 326 

^ Indra of Thibet 329 

Immortality of the soul 114 

proof of the 225 

thoughts on the 311 

there is no distinct or separate . . . 313 
InefTable degrees conferred in the 

Scottish Rite 437 

pre-requisite to obtain the 437 

India 112 

Initiation, principal objects of 109 

effect of 116 

the object and aim of 116 

the periods of 540 

description of 541 

the ceremonies of 541 

generally performed 542 

taught tlie Immortality of the Soul . 544 

the object of the ancient 545 

description of 594 

similarity of 595 

I- N. R. 1 457 

Inscriptions, hieroglyphic 86 

Inundation of the Nile 84 

Isabella of Spain 15 

Iseum in the Sebennyte Nome .... 56 

Isis personified the earth 39 

represented the dawn 57 

search for Osiris 62 

made an emblem 69 

tear drop from eye of 80 

Island of Elephantine 568 

account of 568 

of Mansuriyeh 567 

of Phila; 573 

description of surrounding scenery at 573 

examining temples on the .... 574 

description from our filucca of the 574 



636 



INDEX. 



JENSEN said to have invented ... 50 

Jesuits opposed to ourschool system 500 

John the Grammarian 9 

his request for books . 9 

Joseph sold into Egypt 31 

sold corn to his brothers 31 

Josephus 12-16 

Judah 45 

Judgment of the dead 64 

pictorial representation of ... . 64 

Judge not 440 

our own thoughts are our own . . 440 



KABALAH, cardinal doctrines of . 1S9 

ground work for students .... 193 
all dogmatic religions came from 

the 585 

dreams of St. Martin borrowed 

from the 5S5 

the sanctuary of the 586 

Kadi 83 

Kama or Desire body 356 

contains all-our emotions, etc. . . . 356 

Kanopic jars 78-79-154-159 

mouth of the Nile 160 

Kanopus 30 

Karma, Thoth the Lord of 65 

is the Law of Cause and Effect . . 66 

Good and Bad 67 

thoughts on 286 

Karnak, when I first visited ...... 527 

trip from Luxor to 529 

avenue of sphinxes leading to . . . 529 

description of the temple of . . . . 530 

French Government restoring ... 531 

Kenah and the Gawazee 4S4 

Kenrick and Osirian Myth 74-76-84 

Khartum 77 

Khufu 45 

Knowledge, how to gain 20 

of the old philosophers 230 

of square root . .• 230 

definition of 234 

could easily be lost 336 

comment on 337 

we obtain 438 



PAGE 

Kolosana and vicinity . 425-426 

Kom Ombos, arrived at 567 

description of 567 

LABYRINTH 42 

built by Amen-em-hat III ... . 384 

description of tlie 384 

object of building the 385 

Flinders Petrie exploration of the . 385 

there were ten halls in the 559 

Ladder ascending the 19-20 

Lake Moeris 42 

Manzala 125-155-160 

Mareotis 16-155-158 

Abukir - . 158 

Brulus 160 

Edku 160 

La Pierre de San 30 

established the correctness of Egyp- 
tian inscriptions 30 

Law of Love 492 

thoughts on the 493 

of retribution 67 

Layard's discoveries in Nineveh .... 50 

Legend of Solomon's temple 276 

of the ancestry of Hiram Abiff . . 276 
of Hiram, Solomon and the Queen 

of Sheba 277 

murder of Hiram 279 

of Freemasonry 281 

of Osiris 397 

of Gebel et-Ter 428 

of the Lost Word 628 

Lemuria, continent of 337 

Leo Africanus 84 

Lesser Mysteries • ' 37 

Lever practically applied 49 

Libraries classified 7 

destruction of 9-10 

Libyan mountains • . 49 

Life, is real in the spiritual 311 

principle 354 

Lost Word, power of 335 

was never lost 612 

Lotus, The, is found carved 163 

has been exalted 164 



INDEX, 



637 



Egyptian not the sacred 

description of the 

Luxor, an account of the temple of - - 
description of temple and obelisk at 



PAGE 

164 
165 

527 
528 



MAGI, held images in utter abhor- 
rence 187 

Mahamudiyeh canal 12-15-15S 

Malateya 42 

Mamelukes, account of the massacre of 

the 204 

Man, is Master of his own destiny ... 66 

is not a terrestrial plant 115 

will recognize God in Nature . . . 17S 

makes God in his own image . . . 1S5 

views in regard to God 1S6 

must mourn, sorrow and suffer . . 225 
Egyptians regarded Man as com- 
posed of different entities .... 305 

prenatal e.xistence of 309 

physical body of 349 

according to the Christian idea . . 351 

becomes what he Wills himself to be 48S 

Manas, the Thinker 357 

derivation of the word 357 

description or meaning of 358 

Manetho 43-55-56 

was an Egyptian priest 54 

Mariette Bey 31 

discovered the statue of Kapiru . . 211 

Granite temple discovered by . . . 249 

Temple of Serapis discovered by . 262 

discovered two statues 378 

Massen, its signification 87 

Mason, duty of a 36-4S7 

badge of a 89 

need not cease to be a Christian. Jew, 

or Hindu 173 

in becoming a 173 

a speculative 225 

labors for the benefit o those who 

come after him 227 

is never satisfied with mere cere- 
monies 269 

do not generally care to study . . . 270 

Alasonic emblems 7 



PACK 

literature . . 269 

interest 269 

Lodges in Alexandria 21 

symbols appeal to the eye 37 

precepts 19 

thoughts 19 

teachings 36 

esoteric teachings 93 

knowledge is the most sacred ... no 
student searches for " More Light " 293 
traditions cannot hope to escape ex- 
amination 397 

apron 341-348-349 

Master's Wages 136 

must be guided by the ancient Law 137 

Mason's grip 193 

Mathematics, comprehended by practi- 
cal Masons 49 

Matter 115 

there is no dead or blind 117 

Medinet Habu, location of 512 

description of the interior of . . . 513 

Medum, Pyramids and Mastabas at . . 376 

description of the ; . 377 

Maspero examined the 377 

account of the 379 

Memnonium of Strabo 477 

Memphis, founded by Menes 35S 

transformation of the name .... 358 
required an immense amount of la- 
bor to build the city of 259 

the Necropolis of ancient Egypt . . 260 

was destroyed to build Cairo . . . 262 

the Noph of the Scriptures . . . 262 

Abd-el Latef's description of . . . 262 

Mendesian branch of the Nile 154-178 

Meneptha ^ 81 

Mesopotamia 76 

Minia 429 

account of 430 

price of provisions at 431 

disposing of the dead at 432 

Missionaries 495 

thoughts about 49*5 

H. P. Blavatsky on 497 

we are certainly in need of ... . 497 

Mithra of Persia crucified 331 



638 



INDEX, 



PAGE 

Masonry a system of Morality 34-106 

ritualism is not Masonry 34-539 

originated in India 35 

is a lineal descendant of the Mys- 
teries 3S-S6-490 

real objects of 88 

what the world owes to go-226 

is not a religion 91-442-453 

is not adverse to Christianity ... 93 

has its decalogue 21 

Symbols of 37 

as practiced by the Druses 136 

of the Druses 137 

Arab 139 

descended to us through the Phceni- 

cians 141 

disbelieves no Truth 175 

reverences all the great reformers . 175 
inculcates its old doctrine in relation 

to God 195 

pre-liistoric existence of 202 

successor of the Mysteries 223 

it, is very difficult to solve the 

symbols o£ 271 

like all the religions 271 

real secrets of 272 

in the ritual of 273 

if we view it from a rational stand- 
point 397 

proof of the antiquity of . . . 397-398-399 

in entering the fold of 442 

demands of her applicants a belief 

in one God 444 

does not teach the existence of an 

Anthropomorphic God 455 

tolerates all religions 488 

has ever labored to give humanity 

freedom 493 

the dogma of 499 

antagonizes no creed 499 

has ever been the Champion of 

Liberty 499 

never conspired against the Govern- 
ment 499 

has a vindictive foe in Jesuitry . . . 500 
is mightier than the Church of 

Rome 503 



PAGE 

is strong enough to defend herself . 505 

neither fears nor hates any sect . . 508 
has stepped across the threshold of 

another century 535 

has ramified from the Great Lodge 

of the Perfect Masters 535 

deals largely with the Ethics and 
Symbolism of the Ancient Mys- 
teries 549 

owes its secrets in a great measure 

to the Kabalah 586 

is useful to all men 590 

Moeris Lake 382 

waters are brackish 382 

depth of the 382 

location of the 382 

Mohammed Ah 6-152 

place of 21 

Mokattum hills 49-209 

Moses 18-21-29-36-75 

Mosque of Akbar, and description of . . 212 
of El-Azhar, when founded .... 212 
description of the teaching in El- 
Azhar 212 

of Sultan Hassan 213 

description of 214 

of Mohammed Ali 203 

view from this mosque ...... 208 

Mummilication, the process of 297 

one of the lost arts 301 

began to decline 305 

preserved the body and kept the 

soul with it 307 

Mummied dead, their reception-room . 261 
receives visits from their living 

friends 261 

were often pledged 301 

Mummy, the oldest known 301 

address to a 302 

of the eleventh century . . . . \ . 304 

of Memphis are black 304 

two found by M. de Morgan .... 373 

of Seker-em-sa-f 36S 

found at Hawara 386 

Mysteries 20-37 

the principle of these 97 

esoteric teachings of the 98 



INDEX. 



639 



distinction between the Lesser and 

Greater 

after initiation into the 

ascending from the Lesser to the 

Greater 

none were admitted into the .... 

teachings of the 

Masonry is identical with the . . . 
magnificence of the ceremonies in 

the 

when Plutarch tried to enter the . . 
it was difficult to attain admission 

into the 

Life presented itself as a study in the 

of the Universe 

Moses initiated into the 

were a series of symbols 

Indian 

in India embraced three great 

doctrines 

reception into the Indian 

initiation into the ancient 

reception into the Greek 

The Mithraic 

Zoroastrian, caves of the 

similarity of the rites and ceremonies 

in the various 

The officers' places in the 



loo 

lOI 

1 02 
102 

103 
104 

106 
108 

109 
no 
176 

223 
4S9 
540 

543 
591 
592 
593 
593 
594 

595 

595 



TV TATURE, grand objects of ... . 191 

A ' is full of religious lessons .... 191 

Ancient Greeks defied 192 

Naucratis sole port for entry 32 

Nazir el-Kism 83 

Necropolis ii 

of ancient Memphis 260 

description of Memphis 260 

Nectanebo I 54 

XI 56 

Neith, inscription on the temple .... 27 

Negro Masonry 88 

Nelson, Admiral Lord 154 

Nephthys 61-73-74 

Nile, River 6 

Valley of the 16-86 

overflowing of the 39 



rise at Elephantine . . = . - . . 73 

a source of mystery 75 

its source 76 

The White 77 

The Blue 77-79 

enters Egypt 78 

width at Silsilis 78 

width at Minia 78 

ancients worshipped the 81-85 

liigh 81-83 

hymn to the 81 

crier 82 

color of the water of the 82 

its waters used by Persian Kings . 83 

dams of the 83 

stimulating power of the water of the 8-1 

personified .... 84 

worshipped in many cities .... 85 

flows to all parts of Lower Egypt . 149 

created the soil of Egypt 152 

water contains 169 

Niloa 82-85 

Kilometer 18-84 

Nomes, Egypt was divided into . . . '. 41 

presided over by Monarchs ... 42 

Nubia 18 

OASIS, description of 43 

Oaths of ancient Hebrew .... 609 

Oaths, Arab taking 609 

an account of 610 

description of various 611 

right hand was used in taking . . . 612 

of the King of England 501 

of the Jesuits 502 

comparison of . .' 503 

Obelisk 6 

at Heliopolis 217 

of Usertesen described 218 

Obligated, upon what were the ancient 

craft 607 

Obligation of Arab Masons 141 

Operative Masons, their knowledge . . 49 

Oracle of Amon 76 

Ormuzd produced Light 194 

Oman the Jebusite 17 



640 



INDEX, 



PAGE 

Osiris personified the river Nile 39 

was a form of the Sun God Ra . . 57 

how represented 60 

Lord of the Underworld 60 

Mythical legend of 73-74-75 

PAAMYLES 60 

Pa-Hebt 56-58 

Palace of Nimrod 50 

Panegyries description of 44"56 

Pantheism S7 

Papyrus 86 

does not grow in Lower Egypt . . 161 

for writing 161 

Paracelsus description of the Absolute . 194 

Parsees or Sun Worshippers 187 

Parthenon 35 

Pausanias 27 

Pelusiac branch of Nile . . . .31-42-78-79-154 

Perfect Mason is taught 88 

Phallaphoria 60-74 

Pharos 4-58 

founded by 11 

completed by 11 

destroyed 15 

Phatnitic branch of Nile 73-7S-153 

Philo 15 

Phonograph 237 

Phree, signification of 87 

Plato 193 

Point within a circle 445 

Pole Star 445 

Pompey's Pillar, description of ... . 5 

Pope, the temporal power of the ... 15 

Port Said 125 

owes its origin to 122 

Practical operative Mason 7 

comprehended the mechanical arts 35 

Priest, of Egypt 86 

of Heliopolis were famous .... 218 

of the temples of Egypt 51 

of the Nile . . . < 51 

Pyramids, at Gizeh 52-S5-247-365 

a trip to the Great 247 

description of the group 24S 

storjf connected with Men-KauRa . 249 



description of the Great . . - 
entrance to the Great . . . . , 
electric experiment on the . . 
a trip to the Sakkarah . . . . 

account of our trip 

of Pepi II 

of Pepi I 

step Pyramid 

Blunted , 

ofLisht 

of Hawara 

of El-Lahun 

was used for initiation . . . , 

Pythagoras taught 

where and when born .... 
travelled in foreign countries 
description of his Life's work 
account of what he taught . 



250 

250 
253 
365 
366 

367 
368 
371 
371 
374 
3S5 
413 
538 
loi 
230 
231 
231 
273 



QUARTERNARY Man 89 

the building of 349 

is composed of 353 

Que.xalcote of Mexico 327 

Quirinus of Rome • 328 

RA 82 

The Sun God . 87 

Rameses II, discovery of 518 

died thirteen centuries b. c 521 

description of tomb prepared by . 522 

account of the mummy of 523 

unwrapping the mummy of ... . 525 

poem on 526 

Rameses IV 52 

Ramesseum 514 

the mortuary temple of Rameses II 514 

description of the 514 

Ramleh 16 

Ras-et-tyn .' . . 4-11-15 

Regio Brucheum 7 

Rhine 76 

Reincarnation, Transformation .... 236 

Religion, union of all 454 

a clergyman's thoughts on ... . 455 

all liad a common origin 458 

of the Egyptians 233 



INDEX. 



641 



Reservoirs 3 

Retribution, the Law of 67 

Reveal, is not properly understood . . 271 

definition of the word 271 

Reverend Dr. C. W. Drees 14 

Rites of the ancient Mysteries 20 

Rivers of Life • . . . . 75 

Roda and its bazars 4^4 

Roman Catholic Church 12 

her persecutions of other sects . . 13 

Pike on the Roman Catholic Church 503 

Roman Eagle 87-341 

more ancient than 343 

origin of the Roman Eagle .... 344 

Rosetta Stone 30 

branch of Nile 153 

town of 154 

Rose Croix, symbol of 492 

explanation of 492 

Rotation of the Earth and Galileo . . 229 

the idea of Lactantius in relation to it 229 

Royal Secret 20 

SACRED writings 86 

Sais 27-28 

Sais, tutelar deity of 27 

magnificence of ancient 29 

wonderful chapel at 29 

the modern name of ...... . 29 

utter ruin remains of 29 

Sailors of our Dahabiyeh 414 

description of their pastime .... 418 

two of their songs 419 

account of our crew 420 

Sakia Hindu Saviour 322 

Sakiyeh 149 

description of a 168 

, Sakkarah, Necropolis of 365 

investigations at 367 

exploring pyramids and tombs at . 370 

description of Step pyramid at . . 371 

Salt-marshes for pasturage 166 

Salt works 15 

Salvation Army, noble work of the . . 498 

San, miracles performed there .... 29-40 

modern name 29 



PAGK 

Statue found at - ■ . 29 

La pierre de 3° 

when founded 30 

where located 30 

capital of Egypt 32 

Scarabajus, an account of 369 

emblematic of the Sun 369 

Schopenhauer 66 

Screw known to the ancients 49 

Sebynnitic 154 

Secret Doctrine 91 

Sages looked to the 92 

definition of thoughts from the . . 195 

is the source of all Wisdom .... 459 

tells us Truth can never be killed . 550 

Thoughts on the 580 

Sedan, Battle of 14 

Self-less-ness, practice of 226 

Semmenud, the site of 54 

birth-place of Manetho 54 

a typical Egyptian town 56 

Serapeum 5 

discovery of the 262 

what led to its discovery ...... 263 

not in existence to-day 263 

what was found there 263 

for what purpose erected 264 

Seraphis — Auser — Hapi 264 

worsliipped at Memphis 264 

Serpent 18 

Sesonchis united Upper and Lower Egypt 42 

was contemporary with Solomon . 44 

Scriptural name of 44 

Sesostris 74 

Set an Asiatic divinity 41 

Shaduf 149 

description of . ., 167 

Sharaki land 149 

requires artificial irrigation . . . 149 

Sharona 423 

Shekh-Abada, description of 464 

Shekh-Fadl and ruined temples .... 425 

Shellal 79 

Shekhel-Beled 83 

Shinar 49 

Shoes, removal of 595 

account of the custom of removing 595 



642 



INDEX, 



PAGE 

Signs of the Zodiac 402 

named from some event 402 

explanation of the 408 

Silsilis 78 

Sixteen Saviours, account of 317 

comments upon 334 

Solomon King of Israel 44 

Solomon's temple 272-275 

not a vestige of it to be found to- 
day 272 

Somerset river 77 

Solon 28 

Sostratus the Cnidian 12 

Sothis 38 

Soudan 79-80 

Soul passing through Amenti 108 

Immortality of the 114 

to recover its lost estate the . . . 115 

evolution of the 117 

of man is immortal 174 

once launched on the stream of 

evolution 309 

is immortal 321 

Sowing in the Land of Egypt .... 149 

Sphinx, looked to the East Si 

distant from great pyramids .... 253 

age of the 253 

description of the 255 

Kenrick's account of the ..... 255 

Bacon's account of the fable of the 256 

Arab writers idea of 536 

Spiritual temple 274 

description of by Bro. J. D. Buck . 274 

Statue of Kapiru, description of . ... 211 

of Ra Hotep 377 

of Nofrit 377 

Steel, pens of 52 

piece found by Colonel Vyse ... 52 

Stelae, definition of and their use ... 30 

generally found in tombs or temples 31 

discovered before the Sphinx . . . 254 

Stone, La pierre de San 30 

Strabo 11-41 

Suez Canal 123 

planning the work 124 

when commenced 124 

opened up for ve.ssels 128 



page: 

average width ; . . 128 

passage through 128 

account of ancient 129 

Summer Season begins 150 

what they plant at the 151 

Sun worshippers of Persia and India . 187 

Ancient Egyptians worshipped the 1S8 

motions of the 189 

God worshipped under the symbol 

of 389 

why they worshipped the 3S9 

rises in the East 305 

sets in the West 396 

i-epresents officers of Blue Lodge . 396 

adored by the Arabs 405 

description of the setting 427 

there is no new thing under the . . 57S 

Supreme Architect 36-173 

Swastica, antiquity of the 28& 

its form 287 

an account of the 287 

is found in every country 2S9 

Syene or Aswan 5-569 

shadowless well at . 569 

scenes at 569 

souvenirs to be obtained at ... . 570 

our departure from 576 

Symbolic degrees 587 

said to contain the whole of 

Masonry .... 588 

Gil Barnard upon the 588 

Thoughts on the • . . . 589 

Symbols, antiquity of i8^3r 

are used to conceal not to reveal . 18 

are found throughout the world . . 35 

appeal to the eye 35, 

definition of Masonic 36 

secrets of Masonry lie concealed in 272 

many Masons take the 272 

can be plainly traced \ . 281 

come out of the shadowy dead past 282 

were the universal language of . . 282 

of the Rose Croix 492 

are not fully explained 538 

of the chequered pavement .... 596 
the most sacred known to the He- 
brew 609. 



INDEX. 



643 



PAGE 

TANIS 29 

Tanitic 31-61-73-78-154 

Taxation 83 

rate of 84 

Tel-el-Amarna, ruins of 468 

Temple of Caesar 6 

of Seraphis 8-262 

of Neith 28 

of Ptah 51 

Hephaistos at Memphis 259 

account of chamber in it .... 260 

of Seti 477 

of Raraeses II 480 

of Medinet Habu 512 

Ramesseuni 514 

of Rameses III 529 

of Luxor 527 

of Karnak 529 

of Eshne 561 

of Edfu 564 

building of the 16 

of Lower Egypt differ from those 

of Upper 41-58 

Ten commandments 21 

Tenha, location of 429 

description of 429 

Thammuz of Syria 325 

Thebes 17-42-81 

arrival at /\/\/\ 

"hundred gated" 511 

Thebiad, a description of the 559 

Theodosius 9 

Thoth, in the halls of Amenti 64 

the Divine nature 65 

Thothmes III 6-51 

discovery of the mummy of . . . 518 

condition of the sarcophagus of . . 520 

unwrapping the mummy of ... . 520 

comments on the mummy of . . . 521 

Thought lives and is eternal 177 

God is primarily and essentially . . 196 

and how it functions 234 

Pike on 235 

existed before man was born . . . 242 

proof of the power of 242 

like chickens come home 243492 

are perfect entities 243-492 



PAGE 

has no language , . . 492 

freedom of 447 

poem on 492 

on the glorious Truths of Masonry 535 

on the Sphinx 537 

on Egyptian processional cere- 
monies 537 

on Symbols and Symbology . . . 539 

from the Secret Doctrine 552 

on Egypt 577 

on ancient Religions 579 

on God 177 

on the great universe of God ... 176 

Thulis of Egypt 329 

Tiberius 6 

malleable glass made in his reign . 50 

Tigris 76 

Tombs of the Caliphs and description . 214 

Campbells, discovered by 249 

of Tih, description of 265 

Beni Hassan 433 

Stabl Antar 471 

soldiers, description of 472 

of Thebes 515 

at Der-el-Bahari 515 

El-Kab 562 

Paheri, description of 563 

Edfu 564 

Gebel, or Hagar Silsilis 565 

Toparchies 41 

Tradition of the Phoenix • 218 

signification of the 583 

without the aid of 583 

proof of the truth of 583 

Transformation 1 1 1 

thoughts on 112-308-309 

Transforming pagap temples to Chris- 
tian churches 332-333 

Transmigration, my thoughts on . . . 307-308 

Trilingual stone 30 

Trimurti in the cave of Elephanta . . . 113 

definition of the ii4 

Trinity, the doctrine of, found in all 

religions • . . 194 

of the Greeks 195 

Doctrine of the 197 

Typhon 61-62-69-73 



644 



INDEX. 



PAGE 

UR^S 43 
a symbol of royalty and immor- 
tality 44 

VALENTINIAN 15 

Valens 15 

Vatican • 84 

Veiled symbols 35 

Vibrations 491 

the Law of 491 

demonstration of the Law .... 491 

Vicissitudes of Life 288 

Victoria Nyanza 75-77 

Voyage up the Nile and why I made it 414 

thoughts on a 415-416 

descriptions of the .... 420-424-434-463- 
469-474-477-560-562-563-567 



\1 T^ALKER, E. D 

' ' we sow what we reap .... 

the hand that gmites us is our own . 

Wasp dance 

Watchwords of Masonry 

Water fowl 

Wedge practically applied by 

Weighed in the balance 

Wekil 

Well, Joseph's 

discovered by Saladin 

Whatsoever a man soweth ....... 

White Leather Apron 

poem on the 

should be free from 

what it sliould be made of 

what it teaches 

White Lodge of Adepts 

were Great Teachers 

Wicked are punished 

Winter Season commences 



66 

66 
66 
562 
19 
41 
49 
64 

83 
207 
207 
69 
89 
347 
34S 
34S 
349 
229 
229 

65 
149 



PAGE 

Wisdom, keynote to is Meditation . . . 487 

becomes manifest to the Sage . . . 4S9 

Wise, how to become 20 

Wittoba of the Telingonese 326 

Wool, when woven into cloth 166 

Wonderful preservation of Masonry . . 18 

Word — His < 195 

Analysis of The 196 

that was lost 612 

said to be found by David 613 

pronounced with great noise . . . . 613 

where pronounced 613 

was written in many languages . . . 614 

More Light on the 616 

it belonged to the Aryan Race. . . 616 

Brother Buck on the 617-628 

Brother Pike on the 618 

Mr. Williams on A. U. M 622 

is hidden in the Symbolic degrees . 625 

is heard in the Royal Arch .... 629 

Phree Massen. . ' 87 

derived from 87 

every idle 68 

Work of Craftsmen 35 

Arab Lodge 138 

Writing Materials 161 



ZARATHUSTRA, or Zoroaster ... 187 

proclaimed himself tlie messenger 

of Ahura Mazda 543 

Zend-Avesta — sacred book of the Par- 
sees or ancient Persians 187 

Zoan 29 

field of 30-40-41-57 

importance of 32 

antiquity of its temple 32 

magnificence of its temple 32 

Zodiac 38-400 

description of the ^ . 400 

thoroughly understood by the an- 
cient Egyptians 408 







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